Best Country for Trading (Tax efficiency)

you can choose Hungary and your company would pay a flat 9% regardless of anything or you can choose Estonia and your company would pay 0% on the retained profits and 20% at the time of distribution.
Does it mean that "all" you have to pay is only 9% tax on Hungary ?
 
Does it mean that "all" you have to pay is only 9% tax on Hungary ?
If you incorporate a company in Hungary then yes, the entity will pay a flat 9% corporate tax regardless of the nature of the income. The money that you withdraw from the company in the form of dividends is free of withholding tax if you live somewhere else. If you live in Hungary and you get dividend from a company then you have to pay an additional 15% income tax on the dividend you received.

If you want to withdraw everything then Estonia is better with flat 20% and 0% on undistributed profit or Bulgaria with 10% flat on all income whether personal income tax or corporate. The dividend tax is flat 5% in Bulgaria if you want to stick to a company.

So you'd pay a combined ~22.65% with a Hungarian company if you're a resident of Hungary, 20% in Estonia or 14.5% in Bulgaria with a Bulgarian company. These rates includes the corporate tax + dividend tax.

If you really want to pay tax then Bulgaria is hard to beat.
 
your information was great in various posts & was superior to anyone.you mentioned many options & revealed many misconceptions .this post was interesting ,but it can be completed even more due to your recent posts .for example Hungary tax is much lower than tax heavens like Singapore or HongKong or Panama !! (if you don't live there)
in the section of "interesting" places (in your previous post) you can add Hungary , Bulgaria etc...
now another parameter is came into this equation .the place of living can be different than place of corporation and as a result different tax and new combination .i'm really interested to see new options on different interesting places and update on that post .


I heard this bs from various people about various countries. Let me explain.

You earn $50,000 with your regular job and you make $30,000 with trading. Yes, then chances are you won't have to pay additional taxes. However if you earn $50,000 with your job and you make $100,000+ by trading actively then chances are they gonna say that is your primary source of income thus you should regular income tax + social security.

It's just like the spread betting in the UK. If you have a job and you earn $100,000 plus you make $100,000 by "betting" then it may be tax free however if your trading (betting) income is significantly higher than your regular income than they can say that it's your primary source of income, your profession and they gonna tax you.

Seriously, if you really want to pay tax then why don't you just pay 10% in Bulgaria and 0% on EEA share trading?
You must understand that the tax authorities are not stupid anymore. They'll tax you based on common sense. If your story is fishy then save for the fines.
 
consider someone is living in a country which foreign source income is tax free like Malaysia,Panama etc... , and in the meanwhile he/she has a corporate in Hungary for trading .as a result he pays only 9% tax on his all income and 0% to the country he lives . am i right?

PS, you mentioned EEA shares tax is 0% in Europe . does EEA future products like Eurex (FGBL/FESX = German Bund / DJ Euro Stoxx) is the same in Europe ?

If you incorporate a company in Hungary then yes, the entity will pay a flat 9% corporate tax regardless of the nature of the income. The money that you withdraw from the company in the form of dividends is free of withholding tax if you live somewhere else. If you live in Hungary and you get dividend from a company then you have to pay an additional 15% income tax on the dividend you received.

If you want to withdraw everything then Estonia is better with flat 20% and 0% on undistributed profit or Bulgaria with 10% flat on all income whether personal income tax or corporate. The dividend tax is flat 5% in Bulgaria if you want to stick to a company.

So you'd pay a combined ~22.65% with a Hungarian company if you're a resident of Hungary, 20% in Estonia or 14.5% in Bulgaria with a Bulgarian company. These rates includes the corporate tax + dividend tax.

If you really want to pay tax then Bulgaria is hard to beat.
 
your information was great in various posts & was superior to anyone.you mentioned many options & revealed many misconceptions .this post was interesting ,but it can be completed even more due to your recent posts .for example Hungary tax is much lower than tax heavens like Singapore or HongKong or Panama !! (if you don't live there)
in the section of "interesting" places (in your previous post) you can add Hungary , Bulgaria etc...
now another parameter is came into this equation .the place of living can be different than place of corporation and as a result different tax and new combination .i'm really interested to see new options on different interesting places and update on that post .
Unfortunately, the site doesn't let me edit that post anymore so it will stay that way.
The thing is, you'd pay 9% corporate tax with a Hungarian company but why would you do that if you have no intention to live there?

You can pay 0% corporate tax with a company in Singapore, Hong Kong or Panama or even with an LLC in the US. Please bear in mind that you as an individual will have to pay personal income tax in your country of residence if you use an LLC in the US. If you use an LTD in Singapore, Hong Kong, Panama or anywhere else then chances are that company will become a resident in the same country where you live and the company will be subject to the local corporate tax rates and rules thus it will eliminate all the possible benefits. They may even add an additional CFC tax on top of your corporate income tax and personal income tax.

Like I have said numerous times, if you're trading then the income from such activity becomes taxable where the trading occurred unless the trader was a third party with an appropriate financial license and the trades was done on a discretionary basis.

If you live in Malaysia for instance and you have a company in Hungary that you're using to trade with then the following happens:
  • your Hungarian company must pay 9% corporate tax to Hungary
  • your company must pay an additional 25% to Malaysia
  • you'll have to pay dividend tax in Malaysia on the personal level
So you'll pay 34% in corporate taxes alone. Why? Because your Hungarian company is managed and controlled from Malaysia (assuming you live there) and its income is sourced from Malaysia because you was trading with it.

Now your next question will be hiring someone as a director, right? Sure, but don't forget to give him an appropriate salary and he must have the appropriate financial experience, education and license. The authorities won't belive that your director is trading for an annual salary of $1,000 while the trading resulted in a $100,000 profit and he has zero license and experience in the field of his claimed work.
 
consider someone is living in a country which foreign source income is tax free like Malaysia,Panama etc... , and in the meanwhile he/she has a corporate in Hungary for trading .as a result he pays only 9% tax on his all income and 0% to the country he lives . am i right?

PS, you mentioned EEA shares tax is 0% in Europe . does EEA future products like Eurex (FGBL/FESX = German Bund / DJ Euro Stoxx) is the same in Europe ?
I never said that EEA share trading is tax free in Europe :D

If you trade stocks on EEA markets, lightly on your own name while you are a resident in Bulgaria then it's tax-free. All other trading profit is taxed at 10%.
 
If you consider that taxes are a problem, it means that you make enough money to ask professional advice instead of posting on ET.
Probably another dreamer.
But the only thing he should already understand is that fake construction were easy in the past but all the doors get closed, one by one. So get a real solution.
 
If ever the FTT will be effective, everybody will have to revise his financial situation. FTT can change profitability very heavily, depending on your trading style. Cost would be around $25 per RT per contract ES. :wtf:
 
Same as the UK, Ireland, Malta and Cyprus. Works fine if you're investing but useless if you're trading. Trading income is not foreign sourced. Btw the articles you linked explains this nicely.
 
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