Video Briefing

Nomad Capitalist: How to Choose a Low-Tax Country to Move to

Aug 23, 2020Video Briefing14:33Watch on YouTube

Small‑business owners earning ≈ US $500 k – $1 M annually can dramatically lower their tax burden by separating personal residence from the corporate domicile and, where appropriate, obtaining a second passport. The approach hinges on two parallel tracks: a personal tax plan that moves tax residency to a low‑ or no‑tax jurisdiction, and a business tax plan that relocates the company to a jurisdiction with favorable corporate rules.

The tax‑friendly quadrant

  • Personal side: Choose a country that does not tax foreign‑source income (e.g., Montenegro, Malaysia, Thailand, Panama, Georgia).
  • Business side: Incorporate where corporate tax rates are low (e.g., Malta ≈ 5 %, Gibraltar, Portugal’s non‑habitual resident regime).
  • The two locations need not be the same; many clients live in one low‑tax country while the company is registered in another.

Common jurisdictions and their key features

Jurisdiction Personal tax treatment Corporate tax rate Path to residency / citizenship
Portugal 20 % flat tax on Portuguese‑source income; foreign income exempt under NHR 21 % (reduced to 17 % for SMEs) Golden‑Visa (investment ≥ €350 k) → residency → citizenship after 5 yr
Gibraltar No tax on foreign income for non‑domiciled residents 10 % Residency via property purchase; citizenship not automatic
Montenegro No tax on foreign income for non‑domiciled residents 9 % Simple residency permits; citizenship after 5 yr
Malaysia No tax on foreign income for non‑resident; “Malaysia‑My Second Home” (MM2H) visa (currently suspended) 24 % (but many offshore structures avoid local tax) Long‑term visa (10 yr) with bank deposit; citizenship not granted
Thailand No tax on foreign income for non‑resident; elite visa options 20 % Elite visa (5–20 yr) for wealthy individuals
Panama Territorial system – only Panama‑source income taxed 25 % (reduced to 0 % for offshore companies) Friendly Nations Visa → residency → citizenship after 5 yr
Georgia No tax on foreign income for non‑resident; 1 % “small business” tax 15 % (reduced rates for small firms) Easy residency via property or business; citizenship after 5 yr
Malta Remittance basis – foreign income taxed only if remitted 35 % (effective rate can be lowered to ≈ 5 % with tax refunds) Individual Investor Programme (≈ €650 k) → citizenship in ~1 yr
St. Lucia & other Caribbean Territorial – foreign income untaxed 0 % for offshore entities Citizenship by investment: US $100‑150 k donation or real‑estate purchase; passport in 3‑6 mo

How second passports are obtained

  1. Ancestry – Proof of a grand‑parent or parent’s citizenship (e.g., Irish, Italian, Canadian).
  2. Investment citizenship – Direct cash donation, real‑estate purchase, or business investment (e.g., St. Lucia, Malta, Dominica).
  3. Paper residence – Obtain a residence permit in a low‑tax country with minimal physical presence (e.g., Georgia, Montenegro). After 3‑5 years of continuous residency, apply for citizenship.
  4. Strategic corporate investment – Large investors (e.g., $5‑10 M hotel projects) can negotiate fast‑track citizenship with certain European finance ministries.

U.S. citizens: special considerations

  • Renunciation eliminates all U.S. filing obligations (FBAR, FATCA) but may trigger an exit tax on worldwide assets.
  • Residency abroad does not automatically exempt U.S. citizens; they must still file U.S. returns and may owe tax on worldwide income.
  • Puerto Rico offers a 4 % flat tax on qualified income for bona‑fide residents under Act 60.
  • Offshore structures (e.g., a Malta company) can reduce effective tax to 5‑10 % if the individual establishes non‑U.S. tax residency.

Potential tax savings

  • A typical entrepreneur paying ≈ 30 % U.S. federal tax on $500 k profit could reduce liability to 4 %–5 % by moving personal residency to a non‑tax jurisdiction and incorporating in a low‑tax country.
  • For U.S. citizens who renounce, the tax rate can approach 0 % on foreign‑source income, subject to the exit tax calculation.
  • Non‑U.S. high‑net‑worth individuals often achieve zero personal tax on foreign income by establishing residency in Montenegro, Georgia, or Panama and using an offshore company.

Practical decision criteria

  • Business model: E‑commerce with overseas warehousing benefits from jurisdictions that allow easy import/export and have favorable VAT regimes (e.g., Malta, Gibraltar).
  • Physical presence: If you can spend ≤ 90 days per year in a jurisdiction, many “paper residence” programs remain valid.
  • Investment appetite: Citizenship‑by‑investment requires $100‑$650 k; paper residence and naturalization need only modest bank deposits or property rentals.
  • Regulatory risk: Avoid jurisdictions on major “blacklists” (e.g., Dubai for some European tax‑exempt schemes).
  • Long‑term goals: If you plan to live in Europe, consider countries offering tax holidays for 5‑10 years (Portugal NHR, Malta residency).

Preferred locations for lifestyle and wealth preservation

  • Malaysia & Georgia: Low cost of living, friendly immigration policies, and no tax on foreign income.
  • Montenegro: Relaxed lifestyle, EU‑adjacent, simple residency.
  • Colombia & Mexico City: Vibrant urban centers with affordable living; suitable for digital nomads.
  • Singapore: Robust banking and asset‑management hub; ideal for storing wealth (bank accounts, stocks, bonds, REITs) rather than low‑yield real estate.
  • Cambodia: Attractive real‑estate yields and a 25‑year track record of no recession; suitable for investment, not primary residence.

Wealth‑storage tactics

  • Bank accounts in stable jurisdictions (Singapore, Hong Kong) for liquidity and privacy.
  • Diversified portfolios (global equities, bonds, REITs) managed by reputable relationship managers.
  • Selective real‑estate in emerging markets with high rental yields (e.g., Cambodia) while avoiding heavily regulated European short‑term rental markets.

By aligning personal residency, corporate domicile, and citizenship strategy, a high‑earning entrepreneur can legally lower their effective tax rate from 30 % + to single‑digit percentages, while gaining mobility and protection against future regulatory changes.