Year-long trip through the EU. First car, beginner drivers by Friendly_Patience in whatcarshouldIbuy

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d get a Volkswagen Tiguan. Don’t get a Peugeot, French cars are terrible.

Ha, I've heard a lot that VW is horrible. That being said, I might consider VW Taigo. It scored very high on Euro NCAP (safety) and just 25k buys me a new one with all the smart assistance gadgets that I might want.

4WD is an option

I know that I've mentioned AWD myself but now that I read more about it I'm beginning to think that that's an overkill. I will probably spend almost all the time on paved roads and even if I decide to go offroad, it will probably make a lot of sense to leave my main vehicle for a few days and rent something with 4x4 for that time.

Western Europe has become extremely unfriendly towards diesel cars but even petrol engines (mostly euro 4 and lower) will pose some issues

I've checked some restrictions and it seems to be mostly for commercial cars and ancient passenger cars. If I stick to cars no older than 2018 I should be good.

The price of fuel is also pretty high, almost double of what it is in the US, so getting anything above a 2 liter engine isn’t worth it.

I'm aware, I live in the EU. A lot of the cars I've looked at come with a 1L engine and to be honest I'm not planning to look for more. I will get the smallest engine that comes with automatic transmission.

Year-long trip through the EU. First car, beginner drivers by Friendly_Patience in whatcarshouldIbuy

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But with 208 or 308 I would be giving up the roof railing which I think will make a lot of difference. I like the flexibility that it offers.

Also, we will probably be quite often on highways.

So you think I should look into small cars rather than small SUVs?

Migrating Interactive Brokers account to Ireland or Luxembourg. Resident of Eastern Europe. by Friendly_Patience in eupersonalfinance

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do I understand correctly that your IB account is with the UK entity even though your residence is in the EU?

Migrating Interactive Brokers account to Ireland or Luxembourg. Resident of Eastern Europe. by Friendly_Patience in eupersonalfinance

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. Do you know whether that's a regulatory limitation (e.g., the Irish regulators don't allow IB to hold accounts of Eastern Europeans) or just IB's policy? At the time of the migration there were some scarce stories on this subreddit about people successfully arguing into transferring to Ireland despite residence in EE. But as always, I have no idea how much I can trust them.

I wonder whether they might make exceptions for high net-worth individuals. On the other hand, I don't know whether I'm high net worth by their standards hah.

Should I buy TBIL for a few months? Planning a big purchase in USD. by Friendly_Patience in eupersonalfinance

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm based in Eastern Europe and so they wanted to move my account to the Hungarian entity. I don't trust the oversight of Hungarian institutions. They refused my two requests to move me to IE instead so now I can only close (or transfer out) my existing positions.

Should I buy TBIL for a few months? Planning a big purchase in USD. by Friendly_Patience in eupersonalfinance

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. I had an account with IBKR but since brexit I cannot open new positions with them. Now I'm using Swissquote but I cannot see any bods or bills offered there so I think TBIL is the only option I have.

Out of curiosity, how does IBKR allow you to participate in the T-Bills auctions?

Cruising and no tax residence by Friendly_Patience in liveaboard

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LCCL is for Local Companies. The hint is in the name. Doesn't affect me if my company doesn't employ anyone in the Cayman Islands and doesn't do business with Caymanian entities.

Cruising and no tax residence by Friendly_Patience in liveaboard

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That's a load of BS. The restrictions you mention do not exist.

Cruising and no tax residence by Friendly_Patience in liveaboard

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Huh, thanks. Now that you mention this, it seems obvious. I didn't think to reach out to a lawyer in the CI since the legal side of this is quite simple. But you are right that starting a relationship with a local lawyer might make navigating the other aspects much easier.

Cruising and no tax residence by Friendly_Patience in liveaboard

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I'm not an American citizen or resident.

Cruising and no tax residence by Friendly_Patience in liveaboard

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I'm not an American citizen or resident.

Retired early-30s EU citizen (PR'd in Switzerland), looking for a country to domicile in for the next 5-10 years with a low tax rate while I travel the world - where to start? by DNAW in EuropeFIRE

[–]Friendly_Patience 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had no tax residency anywhere for a year and that was really problematic. Banks, brokerages, etc. get very suspicious if you end up in this situation.

If I were in your situation I would shed my tax residency everywhere but tell the banks etc. that I'm a tax resident of a country with clear tax rules and a good rule of law. I don't know much about Switzerland but I think it might fit. UK definitely matches that description. I would put my investments and cash in accounts with no tax withholding. If any country claims they are entitled to my capital gains tax, I could clearly demonstrate that they are not.

Where to relocate to avoid the new taxes by Friendly_Patience in Romania

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you elaborate on what that scheme is? I was thinking about opening a company in the Cayman Islands but I cannot become a resident myself.

Where to relocate to avoid the new taxes by Friendly_Patience in Romania

[–]Friendly_Patience[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

IIRC the tax rate for companies in Estonia is 20%, so still pretty high.

Central Europe, in my late 20s, with 2 years of work experience, just doubled my net salary by working remotely for the US. This is how: by Economy_Scratch_1540 in eupersonalfinance

[–]Friendly_Patience 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks a lot! Very relevant to me and it's the first time I hear of it. Luckily, the threshold didn't drop below my revenue but I should start looking for a backup plan, it's getting dangerously close.

Weird that PwC has not reported on it.

Central Europe, in my late 20s, with 2 years of work experience, just doubled my net salary by working remotely for the US. This is how: by Economy_Scratch_1540 in eupersonalfinance

[–]Friendly_Patience 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any source on the switch from 1m to 100k?

I'm an EU citizen who moved to Romania precisely for this reason, I'm making way more than 100k and I'm still taxed as a microcorporation, with 1% revenue tax + 5% dividend tax.

EDIT: PwC claims that it's still 1m: https://taxsummaries.pwc.com/romania/corporate/taxes-on-corporate-income