If you have not statisfied the residency requirements in any other country, then you remain Irish resident. The legislation and tax treaties are written in the opposite direction - you become resident somewhere by meeting certain criteria there and be definition you are no longer resident in the previous country where you were considered resident.
Think about it for a minute... people like Tina Turner, James Galway and Phil Collins all have access to the best tax advice going and if there was a way to be 'not resident anywhere' they'd have figured it out. But all three have established residence in Switzerland because they were able to do a special deal there - lump sum taxation: They pay a fixed amount (usually a couple of million) every year regardless of how much they earn. They would not be paying it, unless they had to.
I am a 27 year old professional gambler and the very maximum I can see myself losing in one year is €80,000.
noproblem I don't understand your reply at all, was there another post below mine that your replied to that has since been deleted?
I should assume that the lack of replies in the past 24 hours are a positive thing, ie there are not many obvious flaws with my investment policy?
Oh my goodness.
My advice to you is to buy a couple of properties in Ireland before year end and hang onto them. No CGT if you hold onto them for 7 years. At least you'll still have the properties in 7 years time as you might have nothing at all left otherwise.
Winning steaks don't last forever.
Can you provide a link to the legislation that states "you have to be resident somewhere"?
I have certainly not satisfied residency requirements anywhere in the past few years.
if he has an habitual abode in both States or in neither of them, he shall be deemed to be resident of the State of which he is a national.
if he has an habitual abode in both States or in neither of them, he shall be deemed to be a resident of the State of which he is a national;
if he has an habitual abode in both States or in neither of them, he shall be deemed to be a resident of the State of which he is a national;
Oh my goodness.
My advice to you is to buy a couple of properties in Ireland before year end and hang onto them. No CGT if you hold onto them for 7 years. At least you'll still have the properties in 7 years time as you might have nothing at all left otherwise.
Winning steaks don't last forever.
Hi Jim,
Are you sure you're not mixing up residence with domicile? AFAIK the Revenue will pay back PAYE deducted once you declare (/prove?) you are leaving the country for a defined period - you do not have to declare residency elsewhere.
Tina T et al. move to Switzerland and base themselves there. The OP chooses not to base himself anywhere. So far, he is doing okay - but with 'tie-breaker' clauses becoming a feature of tax treaties - he is likely to find himself resident somewhere, whether he likes it or not !
Well you have been told this before and I'm aware you found so called tax advisers who confirmed you're not resident anywhere,
That is exactly why we diversify our investments and not concentrate in a single asset class in the first place as you are suggesting!
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