Global residency for founders: minimize risk, maximize flexibility
Sep 9, 2025
Residency determines where you’re taxed, what you must file, and how authorities view your business. For mobile founders, unclear residency can trigger surprise tax bills, audits, or double filings. With a structured plan, you keep freedom while avoiding risk.
Why Residency Planning Matters
Residency is the gateway to your tax position. Most jurisdictions use day‑count rules, ties to your “center of vital interests,” and proof of ongoing connections (home, family, management) to decide where you’re a resident. Without documentation, your travel pattern can look like residency everywhere—and nowhere.
Core Principles
Choose a Primary Base
Establish one clear tax home that fits your lifestyle and business model. Know its thresholds (e.g., 183‑day rules) and what counts as ties: housing, dependents, company management, and local bank/utility footprints.Territorial vs. Worldwide Tax
Territorial systems tax local‑source income only; worldwide systems tax your global income if resident. Align your entity, invoicing, and travel with the system you choose.Tie‑Breaker Rules
If two countries claim you, tax treaties apply tie‑breakers: permanent home, vital interests, habitual abode, and nationality. Your logs and contracts should support a consistent story.Substance and Management
Where key decisions happen (management and control) influences corporate tax exposure. Keep board minutes, meeting logs, and decision records in your chosen jurisdiction.
Documentation That Defends You
Day Tracking: calendar exports, travel tickets, passport stamps, and mobile data.
Financial Footprint: leases, utilities, local bank accounts, insurance.
Work Evidence: client contracts, delivery locations, and management records.
Treaty Positions: notes explaining why taxing rights sit in one jurisdiction.
Common Residency Mistakes
“Slow‑travel drift”: accumulating ties in multiple countries without a declared base.
Managerial ambiguity: running the company from wherever you are, creating risk of corporate tax “management and control” claims.
Ignoring exit/entry rules: failing to complete deregistration or initial registration steps.
No supporting documents: having the right facts but no paper trail.
A 30‑Day Residency Reset
Week 1: Select primary jurisdiction; confirm visa/residency path; list treaty partners.
Week 2: Set up documentation (address, bank, insurance); implement day‑tracking tools.
Week 3: Align company governance (board minutes, registered office, management cadence).
Week 4: Draft a residency memo summarizing facts and evidence;




