My question to offshore my Australian business

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OffShorian

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Aug 9, 2016
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Hi everyone, first post! 🙂

I have a well established business in Australia and since I do not live there I thought it would be great not to have it paying income tax. So I have incorporated a new company in Hong Kong and opened a new account at a swiss bank.

The Australian business will "rent" the domain name to my Hong Kong company. Customers will place orders as normal but money will be deposited into the swiss bank account of this new HK company. There will be no income tax in HK, no income tax for me in Australia since I am no longer a resident for tax purposes, the only issue that I can't get past is having the company paying GST (10%).

I just wanted to share the plan and see if any of you guys with more experience see any flaws in this process. I am the only director of both the AU and HK company. I thought it would be best to have it setup this way as I will need some "proof of income" if I ever decide to buy a house and get a mortgage.

Today:
Customers pay at site.com.au > site is owned by AU company > money gets deposited via merchant account into AU account (30% tax on income).

Future:
Customers pay at site.com.au > site is owned by HK company > money gets deposited via merchant account into SWIS account (no income tax in HK or Swiss).

Thanks for any comments!

MDS

Last edited: Aug 9, 2016
 
What is the process of this?⁠ I mean how is the money going into the Swiss account?
 
Did the Swiss bank asked you to sign a document where you declare you are‌ a Citizen of Australia and that they will pass on the information to your tax‍ auth. ?
 
They haven't, but I have provided all documentation proving I am Australian. Since my company‌ is in HK, it doesn't owe money to the Australian government. Not even to KH‍ for that matter as all business is done outside HK. As an Australian, I am⁠ taxed on my global income as long as I am a *resident of australia for⁤ tax purposes* (which I am not, I don't live there anymore).

So no corporate income⁣ tax and no personal income tax too. How is my plan looking? I welcome any⁢ kind of criticism!
 
Also the merchant can settle funds into a Swiss account just as well as a‌ Latvia account. Are there any advantages in using a swiss bank? I am not going‍ to make millions and it seems an unnecessary complication, Latvia seems to be easier as⁠ banks are more flexible.
 
This is actually a great setup but︀ unfortunately reserved for only a few that actually live as an expat and never live︁ anywhere more than 6 months at a time.

Did you went to Switzerland to get︂ the account opened actually?
 
What bank have you opened the⁤ account with in Switzerland. All the bansk I have seen there have similar Internet banking⁣ at least makes it pretty easy to transfer money worldwide!?
 
Actually, Swiss banks are losing its shine. The next⁠ better place to me is going to be Panama. Why Panama? Only a few countries⁤ are in TIEA, except for that few. Fortunately, Panama is one of the very few.⁣ Imagine this, if a Cook Islands company has a Panama Bank account, very good for⁢ those who wants privacy. However, this does not mean total anonymous.
 
I agree half the way.⁣ Panama has signed several TIEA and also comply to FATCA and they have signed several⁢ agreements to exchange TAX information with some of the major European countries. If they are︀ going to execute it I don't know and I believe they don't in fullest.

Like most other offshore jurisdiction they agree to do all this stuff but at the end︁ of they day they don't or at least they forget to report a lot because︂ of the huge administrative burden.
 
Panama only reveal accounts held by the Americans based on what I know.

Below is︀ the list of countries that agreed on TIEA and I don't see Panama in there.︁

The following countries will start reporting in 2017: Anguilla, Argentina, Barbados, Belgium, Bermuda, British Virgin︂ Islands, Bulgaria, Cayman Islands, Colombia, Croatia, Curaçao, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominica, Estonia, Faroe Islands,︃ Finland, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Greece, Greenland, Guernsey, Hungary, Iceland, India, Ireland, Isle of Man, Italy,︄ Jersey, Korea, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, Montserrat, Netherlands, Niue, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania,︅ San Marino, Seychelles, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and︆ Caicos Islands, United Kingdom

Starting to report in 2018: Albania, Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba,︇ Australia, Austria, The Bahamas, Belize, Brazil, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, China, Cook Islands, Costa Rica,︈ Ghana, Grenada, Hong Kong (China), Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Kuwait, Marshall Islands, Macao (China), Malaysia, Mauritius,︉ Monaco, Nauru, New Zealand, Qatar, Russia, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Samoa, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent︊ and the Grenadines, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Sint Maarten, Switzerland, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Uruguay, Vanuatu︋
 
Where did you get the link from Montecristo, can you post a link please? I'm‌ curious if this really is true 🙂
 
Seriously, I am looking for a‌ bank that has no TIEA. If not, I have to set up a foundation to‍ hide.
 
If going through the system horizontally and we encounter︀ so many countries which signed TIEA. The next better option is beat the system vertically︁ by setup Trust and Foundation to protect the identity.
 
Can you shed some light to me how did you incorporate it to a Hong‌ kong company since its from Australia and why hong kong and not other choices? I'm‍ curious
 
Nowadays incorporate offshore companies (including HK) does not require⁠ you to go HK. A lot of online service providers can do so. Why Hong⁤ Kong? Good question, did you noticed that so far the best jurisdictions to use as⁣ the "front company" are Singapore and HK? You pay some tax but not a lot.⁢ You don't need to pay tax if you are not staying in Singapore, your revenue︀ not from Singapore and your money not remit into Singapore. Same thing apply to HK︁ as well. A lot of banks do not treat Singapore and Hong Kong as "offshore︂ company". The nicer words they use are foreign company.
 
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