One of the best places to incorporate an online business

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e-Hustler
Dec 5, 2009
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Sovereign Man is really awesome for tips on offshore banking/incorporating and global investing. I highly recommend signing up to their free newsletter. Here is the most recent email I got about a little Dutch island that might be a good option for gay webmasters interested in offshoring their biz:

Curaçao is one of the best places to incorporate an online business

If you're an Internet entrepreneur looking for the best country or jurisdiction to register a company for an online business, you definitely need to know about Curaçao.

This place is doing something incredibly unique: they've actually created a clear regulatory framework on specifically HOW Internet-based businesses and e-commerce companies should be taxed.

I'll explain why this is so cutting-edge.

Most governments around the world are still living in the past... especially when it comes to taxation.

Look at the US, for example: the last major tax code revision was nearly three decades ago.

In 1986, the tax code established a clear set of rules defined by the brick-and-mortar way that business was done back then.

At the time, nobody had even heard of the Internet, let alone conceived of e-commerce.

Now everything has changed.

People are doing more and more of their shopping online, engaging in all sorts of commerce online, and even running their entire businesses digitally and through the cloud.

Internet entrepreneurs have employees on the other side of the world that they've never met.

Many sell digital products and services that aren't 'manufactured' anywhere.

And they can establish different components of their business (from the location of their servers to where credit card transactions are processed) in different countries across the globe.

There's very little in the current tax code that applies to any of this. As has so often been the case throughout history, technology has completely leapfrogged legislation.

Curiously, it was the tiny Caribbean island of Curaçao which became one of the first countries to bring its tax code into the 21st century. And their approach was incredibly unique.

Curaçao's government realized that competition is stiff. In the 21st century, it's nothing for a business to pick up and redomicile to a friendlier tax regime. It can happen almost instantly.

So right off the bat they knew they had to keep the tax rate extremely low and attractive.

They knew that ZERO was too low. Being a tax-free jurisdiction almost guarantees that you'll end up on some OECD or IRS blacklist.

So the tax rate they set on corporate profits was 2%... something that wouldn't qualify them as a tax haven, but would be low enough to be a rounding error for any reasonable entrepreneur.

More importantly, rather than being just another low-tax island, Curaçao also looked at ways it could actually provide value to 21st century businesses.

The answer was pretty clear: bandwidth.

The Internet businesses they hoped to attract all need bandwidth. So Curaçao invested in fiber to the point that its data centers now have among the fastest, most highly connected data centers in the region.

Internet here is very strong. So instead of just being a Curaçao company in name only, businesses can actually host their servers here as well.

This helps any Internet business justify WHY the company is based in Curaçao.

These are all huge distinctions from anywhere else in the region: (a) not being listed as a tax haven, and (b) actually having robust local services which support the business.

Bottom line, Curaçao is a very solid option to consider, and the government is really rolling out the red carpet for foreigners.

I've joined a small group here for the next couple of days to get more boots on the ground intelligence and contacts on the island; we've already heard directly from the Prime Minister, the Minister of Finance, and the head of the central bank—they are really eager to tell this story.
 


Seems like this place might be great in a few years, but I imagine for now it might be a banking nightmare.

It's getting harder and harder for "offshore" corps (even ones that charge 2% tax) to get bank accounts in reputable countries. I personally know 2 people right now with BVI corps that can't actually get a decent bank account.

I would bet that if you're just sending invoices with wire transfers and all that jazz then you might be fine, but if you need payment processing it would be an uphill battle. Even places like HK and Singapore don't make it easy, and those are as mainstream as you can get.

Side note: Braintree payments just launched in HK. Seems like a big win to me: https://www.braintreepayments.com/
 
Estonia has zero corporate tax rate - 0% - but 20% on dividends. Therefore, incorporate in Estonia and employ yourself there, then live somewhere with low taxes on salary.
 
Estonia has zero corporate tax rate - 0% ...

And beautiful women too.

If only it wasn't so fucking cold there. I wonder if you can simply be there during the summer time and reap the benefits of their tax system.
 
And beautiful women too.

If only it wasn't so fucking cold there. I wonder if you can simply be there during the summer time and reap the benefits of their tax system.

You can incorporate where every you like. The question is how the country you live in determine such things as employment vs biz owner and when they determine that you are de-facto operating a local company.

Example, you live in country a with incorporation in country b. You have customers only from country a and have no staff in country b. Many countries then think you are defacto running a country a business and need to pay country a biz tax.

Another example, you live in country c, your customers are in country a and you have biz in country b. Now, countries are less inclined to ask you to incorporate locally, particularly it becomes easier to employ yourself because 3 countries and their tax code is involved. So you might get away with just paying income tax on your country c income.

There's lots of differences in how countries treat offshore companies and income. The right way to go about things, unless you are rich enough to pay some kickass lawyers, is to make sure to pay tax fully in one country. This country is usually NOT one of the western countries, since they have some very strict corporate rules.

On the other hand, a lot of less prosperous countries are more interested in bringing money in, than being a pain in the ass. If you therefore pay your 15-20% tax there (rather normal tax rate outside G8 and hangarounds), then you can let your government now you're now tax payer and live there, at which point your former master now accepts that you are owned by a new master, albeit a less harsh master.

Make no mistake, you MUST have a master in this world. Money MUST be paid somewhere to the feudal lords in government.
 
Belize has zero tax, period, the banks an utilities are owned by the Brits so very secure.

As far as avoiding taxes, that is illegal, no matter where your corp is. Unless you move to a tax free haven and give up your citizenship.

Even if you move and do not give up citizenship you would still owe tax on worldwide income, play safe.
 
Belize has zero tax, period, the banks an utilities are owned by the Brits so very secure.

As far as avoiding taxes, that is illegal, no matter where your corp is. Unless you move to a tax free haven and give up your citizenship.

Even if you move and do not give up citizenship you would still owe tax on worldwide income, play safe.

That's only for Americans.
 
Canadians too...

And the rest of us soon too I am sure.

To recap, I've been doing business internationally with HK corp for some years and will close it down this year. There are too many middle men and too much of a grey area.

For Europeans, I'd recommend the Estonia route, the company and bank account and login to government reporting can be registered online this spring: https://e-estonia.com/e-residents/about/

Quite a few EU countries have low taxes still. Czech republic is 15-20% without the need for much legal hoop jumping, Estonia is flat tax 20% as I recall, I am sure Poland might be similar. Malta is also as low as 5%.

If you're serious about this tax minimizing thing, then certainly you don't mind spending some months in a foreign country each year. Most countries have a 180 day rule, which means you need to be out of your high tax country that long in order to not be considered resident.

All this Belize and Seychelles is for big ballers who can afford competent tax lawuers and accountants. It's going to ask you quite a lot of money in legal fees to be (sort of) legit and safe, which need to be calculated.

Even for Americans and Canadians, I am sure you are not taxed fully if you reside abroad for some time.
 
@Kelowna and @Rusvik... Canada will require you to pay income tax on your worldwide income IF you are a resident. The US is the only country that will tax your ass even if you're not a resident. Actually not just the US... Eritrea also.

However to be considered a non-resident in Canada you need to spend 6+ months per year outside the country, but also give up all ties (driver's license, healthcare card, real estate, etc...). The only thing you get to keep basically is citizenship + passport.

I've been looking into this for a long time so I know exactly what needs to be done. I'm not ready to give up all my ties yet, but eventually I think I'll transfer my real estate to my parents and give up everything else. I'll then hit up Belize or CR 6+ months and come back here every summer to hang out with family and friends. It's totally legal.
 
@Kelowna and @Rusvik... Canada will require you to pay income tax on your worldwide income IF you are a resident. The US is the only country that will tax your ass even if you're not a resident. Actually not just the US... Eritrea also.

However to be considered a non-resident in Canada you need to spend 6+ months per year outside the country, but also give up all ties (driver's license, healthcare card, real estate, etc...). The only thing you get to keep basically is citizenship + passport.

I've been looking into this for a long time so I know exactly what needs to be done. I'm not ready to give up all my ties yet, but eventually I think I'll transfer my real estate to my parents and give up everything else. I'll then hit up Belize or CR 6+ months and come back here every summer to hang out with family and friends. It's totally legal.

Does Canada have some agreements with the US for sharing health care and such? Lenient border crossings?

One of the few good things about the European Union is the standardization of health care, meaning you are entitled to local public health care if you live in a country. 3 months free of charge and after that pay what the locals do, which is very cheap in many countries. We're talking $100 a month or so for full coverage and everything is covered including pre-existing. Now, public healthcare is public healthcare, which is never really good unless in France.

In the Schengen area in Europe there isn't any border control either, so you can live abroad, but if you don't use your credit card and live with friends/family or AirBNB then you can basically live most of the year in your own country, but still be registered as living abroad.

As for real estate, there are ways around that too. Corporation to own property is one method.

Where there's a will there is a way.
 
Yeah corporation to own real estate is good. The Canadian government is actually using this strategy to avoid paying taxes in Germany for some real estate investments they have there.

I'm not sure about what is being shared between Canada and the US. It doesn't really matter in my case since I have no intention in living in the US.

There are probably some international health insurance companies out there that offer worldwide coverage for a decent fee. Haven't looked into it yet.
 
Does Canada have some agreements with the US for sharing health care and such? Lenient border crossings?

Nope. Canadian provinces don't even share health care. For example, if you live in Ontario and move to British Columbia, you have to switch over to BC's health plan.

If you legally remain a Canadian resident, most (maybe all?) of the provincial health plans will reimburse you for any health care costs incurred outside of country, but only up to what it would cost the Canadian health system. Works fine if you're on holiday in Mexico and break a leg, but not so good if you're in say Houston, as you're unlikely to get reimbursed for the full amount since their health care is more expensive.
 
Just one last thing to add to the low tax rates you are talking about. Belize corps pay zero % tax.

In Canada corps pay just 17% percent tax on the first $400,000.00 I believe, the number was 300k and went up. You can pay yourself with tax free dividends from the corp plus run a ton of expenses through the corp so you dont need much personal monies. I think the limit is $35k you can have personally tax free, that is enough when most of the spending is done by your corp.

But I still love Belize...
 
What good is having 0% tax on company funds if you have to pay tax on it anyway when you pay yourself? How do you buy yourself a house or a car in the USA with company money in Estonia?

In Australia a company pays a flat 30% tax rate, and individuals have a tax free threshold of $20,000. So if your company brings in $100,000, and you pay a few members of your family $20,000 a year out of the company you're effectively getting that money out of the company tax free. Perhaps you pay your retired parents $20,000 a year each to clean your office. Then you're only paying tax on $40,000.

Businesses have it good, if you're a working schlub you're taxed into oblivion once you start making serious money.
 
I've been looking into this for a long time so I know exactly what needs to be done. I'm not ready to give up all my ties yet, but eventually I think I'll transfer my real estate to my parents and give up everything else. I'll then hit up Belize or CR 6+ months and come back here every summer to hang out with family and friends. It's totally legal.

It's a viable option.