I have not researched this aside from just now, but my wife is Czech and she raves about Croatia.
According to this, there is no taxation on capital gains.
https://internationalliving.com/countries/croatia/taxes/
Croatia has no wealth tax, and the following income is tax free:
• Pensions received from abroad
• Interest payments on loans, investments, securities, deposits with financial
institutions, and similar incomes
• Capital gains from trading securities and other financial assets
• Capital gains from real estate if you occupied the property, held it more than three years, or sold it to your spouse or an immediate family member
• Inheritance and gifts are exempt from taxation in the first line of succession. (In other cases, there is a flat rate of 5%.)
Foreigners are subject to tax on the following forms of Croatian income:
• Income from employment that is received in Croatia or from work in Croatia
• Income from a business in Croatia
• Income from real estate
• Income from one’s own or chartered marine ships/aircraft used for dispatching goods or people from Croatian ports/airports
• Income from independent personal activities (deliveries of goods or rendering of services) that are carried out in Croatia or abroad, and are used for the performance of an activity in Croatia
• Income from capital or insurance that originates from within Croatia.
I have not researched this aside from just now, but my wife is Czech and she raves about Croatia.
According to this, there is no taxation on capital gains.
https://internationalliving.com/countries/croatia/taxes/
Croatia has no wealth tax, and the following income is tax free:
• Pensions received from abroad
• Interest payments on loans, investments, securities, deposits with financial
institutions, and similar incomes
• Capital gains from trading securities and other financial assets
• Capital gains from real estate if you occupied the property, held it more than three years, or sold it to your spouse or an immediate family member
• Inheritance and gifts are exempt from taxation in the first line of succession. (In other cases, there is a flat rate of 5%.)
Foreigners are subject to tax on the following forms of Croatian income:
• Income from employment that is received in Croatia or from work in Croatia
• Income from a business in Croatia
• Income from real estate
• Income from one’s own or chartered marine ships/aircraft used for dispatching goods or people from Croatian ports/airports
• Income from independent personal activities (deliveries of goods or rendering of services) that are carried out in Croatia or abroad, and are used for the performance of an activity in Croatia
• Income from capital or insurance that originates from within Croatia.
Unfortunately, it's not always clear as to whether my cash flow from stock market trading counts as capital gains or regular business income. I don't trade daily, but I do trade once every 2-4 weeks or so (maybe more if I have to exit when market gets volatile). And since I depend on that as a main source of income, I fear most tax jurisdiction would view it as a business/personal income rather than capital gains. It's why I tend to lean towards countries that have no personal/biz income or have low tax on it anyway.
