Understanding the Full Scope of Permanent Establishment Regulations

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krispy

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Jun 4, 2024
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Hi,

I'm seeking more information on the topic of Permanent Establishment (PE) and its implications.

If I am a tax resident of Country A and open an offshore company in Country B, I understand that by law, I must report the ownership of the company in Country B to the authorities in Country A. Additionally, I am required to obtain a tax number in Country A for my company in Country B due to my residency status.

I assume that PE considerations are not limited to corporate tax alone. Are there other obligations or requirements I should be aware of?

Appreciate all help on the topic!
 
I am sure others will give more specific answers if you provide specific countries that‌ you are interested in.

Yes.

Depends on the country and your overall company structure.

Again very specific to which countries︁ you are speaking of. If the country you are tax resident is very strict there︂ may be rules such as showing some substance behind your offshore company like reason why︃ it is located there (lowering taxes might not be enough), physical offices, potential staff there,︄ potential resident company director and so on. If you manage your company from country A︅ it might get automatically assigned as resident of company A regardless it is in country︆ B for example.

Without specifics it is very hard to give advice because every situation︇ is unique. Some places are good for withdrawing royalties while those same countries might be︈ s**t for dividends and vice versa. Same goes for things like withholding tax which is︉ another thing to look at. I will also say the obvious while you may gain︊ some guidance from here always contact tax professionals & lawyers before doing anything.
 
Appreciate the reply gh0p!

The country I'm a tax resident is in EU, and I'd be‍ a sole owner and a director.

Exactly, I'm aware of this and would like⁣ to know how far reaching the PE rule is in case company in country B⁢ get assigned residency of country A where I'm a tax resident. Does it apply only︀ to taxes or other things as well?

For example, my local law (country member of︁ EU) dictates:
- that a director must be employed and what kind of salary he︂ must pay himself (even if company is making 0 profit)
- very strict rules on︃ which things I can expense and how
- that I must timestamp: when I come︄ to work, when I go for lunch, when I go for a break, when I︅ stop working, when I get a business phone call after-hours etc.
- must I follow︆ book keeping rules of country A

If by fulfilling the PE rule my only obligation︇ is to report profits of the company to my home country and paying corporate taxes︈ to them I still think it's a better deal then having to follow local laws︉ and legislation that keep changing drastically and frequently. So it would still be a win︊ in my books.

100%, thank you. I'm just preparing myself and want to be aware of things︍ a bit more so I know what things exactly to discuss further and double-check further︎ with a professional. 🙂
 
Depends which EU country it︊ is. Some are more aggressive than others when it comes to that.

If you are︋ operating/managing your company from country A there is high chance it might get assigned tax︌ residence in that country. I would say country Bs rules are just as important. You︍ need accountants and tax lawyers that have experience in both countries. Anything else said is︎ way too vague and generic unless you specify the details.
 
The company would also have to follow labor laws, so it seems unlikely you would‌ be able to avoid any of this by setting up somewhere else. You will only‍ have more paperwork, as you will have to comply with the laws not of one,⁠ but two countries.
Maybe the directory salary requirement thing could be avoided this way, but⁤ I'm not sure.
You should ask a Slovenian lawyer to be sure, but I really⁣ doubt it would make sense. You would be better off physically moving to another country.⁢
 
Thank you, this is the information I was looking for. I wasn't sure if PE applies‌ only to taxes or other things as well.

I thought so, but was in disbelief and wanted to clarify this a bit more⁤ before talking to a professional regarding what would make sense.
 
PE is a tax concept, but you have similar rules for labor laws etc.
The definitions‍ can vary slightly. It can make sense in some cases, such as with crypto or⁠ gaming, where it might be easier to get a license from another EU country.
You would have to speak to a lawyer about the details. But I doubt it would⁤ be worth the additional overhead.
 
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