No, i mean working for your company through an EOR, it's perfectly legal and you minimze the risk of creating a PE for your offshore company.
You still have to solve the offshore director problem, would you say a nominee director wouldn't be enough?
I don't know for other brokers but for IBKR you can register as a Thai resident giving visa/address proof/local bank statement without providing any TIN, as you can be TH resident legally paying no tax in Thailand. 15% withholding tax is applied to US stock dividends as per US-TH DTA. Obviously, you need to be sure not being tax resident in other countries.JustAnotherNomad said:
Yes, for banks it may be OK, but not for taxes, such as reduced withholding tax rates, etc.
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Mercury said:
I don't know for other brokers but for IBKR you can register as a Thai resident giving visa/address proof without providing any TIN, as you can be TH resident legally paying no tax in Thailand. 15% withholding tax is applied to US stock dividends as per US-TH DTA.
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JustAnotherNomad said:
Even easier, you can buy a gun and rob your nearest bank. No need to even provide an address and you will get more money, even if you don't have an account at that bank.
Seriously, the kind of stuff people suggest here...
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JustAnotherNomad said:
Claiming treaty benefits as a tax nonresident of Thailand (whether you are resident or not) is a felony, yes.
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If you live at least 180 days/year in Thailand you are considered TH tax resident. Assuring that you have no other tax residencies, when registering with IBKR you indicate Thailand as your country of residence providing address proofs. Then, when filling W-8BEN form in order to get US-TH DTA WHT rate just tick the box in 6b field "Check if FTIN not legally required".JustAnotherNomad said:
Yes, that would be the correct way to do it. But the suggestion to send IBKR some documents and claim you're entitled to treaty benefits when you're not would be criminal.
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Mercury said:
If you live at least 180 days/year in Thailand you are considered TH tax resident
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JustAnotherNomad said:
Is it possible to obtain a Thai tax residency certificate without spending 180+ days in the country
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He meant you cannot claim that low WHT while you are for example resident in a country which has no DTA and WHT would be 30%.Mercury said:
If you live at least 180 days/year in Thailand you are considered TH tax resident. Assuring that you have no other tax residencies, when registering with IBKR you indicate Thailand as your country of residence providing address proofs. Then, when filling W-8BEN form in order to get US-TH DTA WHT rate just tick the box in 6b field "Check if FTIN not legally required".
Everything seems to be perfectly legal, at least from the international broker and the Thai Revenue Department point of view, as plenty of foreigner/retiree residents in Thailand are invested in stocks with international brokers and receive US dividends withheld at 15% without any issue.
Could you please explain what your point is?
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JackAlabama said:
He meant you cannot claim that low WHT while you are for example resident in a country which has no DTA and WHT would be 30%.
So you effectively made 15% of Uncle Sams back by giving him 15% of your income by providing a tax residency which is not true, whereas uncle sam wants 30%.
If you effectively stay there for 180days +, uncle sam is happy to only take 15%.
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Ok, I get it.Marzio said:
His point is that he will not stay enough in Thailand to be considered TH tax resident.
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I get your point. This is not about the law but law enforcement.JustAnotherNomad said:
This has nothing to do with Thai immigration or what they enforce. You are not allowed to claim the lower US (!!!) tax rate if Thailand doesn't see you as a tax resident.
If you lie to the IRS and say you are Thai tax resident (i.e. that you spent 180+ days in Thailand when you haven't), then that is a crime under US law. Period.
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Boots-on-the-ground with battle-in-the-trenches real-life experience here --->
You only need this if you want to make use of a double taxation treaty.
Mike Forman said:
You only need this if you want to make use of a double taxation treaty.
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Mike Forman said:
Anyone who believes that by staying 90 days in a country and getting a certificate will save him/her from any foreign tax investigation / claim I wish good luck.
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