The 183-day rule is the most cited and most misunderstood concept in digital nomad tax discussions. The basic idea is simple: spend 183 or more days in a country during a tax year, and that country considers you a tax ...
If you freelance for international clients and you do not hold a US passport, your payment infrastructure is both more important and more complicated than your American peers realize. Platform fees, currency conversion margins, and receiving account limitations can silently ...
Estonia’s e-Residency program has been marketed to digital nomads since 2014 as the solution to the “where do I base my business” problem. The pitch is compelling: apply online, pick up your digital ID card at an Estonian embassy, and ...
Every digital nomad insurance comparison online follows the same template: list the monthly premiums, compare coverage limits in a table, drop some affiliate links, and call it a day. None of them address the only question that matters: what happens ...
You incorporated a US LLC through Stripe Atlas or a registered agent in Wyoming. Now you need a business bank account, and you are sitting in a cafe in Lisbon wondering which neobank will actually let you open one without ...
You found a remote job with a company that has no legal entity in the country where you live. Or you are a company hiring a developer in Portugal while your HQ sits in Austin. Either way, someone needs to ...
You moved to Portugal. You work remotely for a US company or run your own freelance business. Tax season arrives and you realize that you now owe explanations to two governments, neither of which makes it easy to understand what ...













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