– What are some of the biggest mistakes you see digital nomads making when it comes to taxes?
– If I’m an American citizen living outside the U.S., do I still owe taxes to the U.S. government?
– Naomi Paine If your speaker is previewing questions, I have one!
I rent a cottage as my home base and use one room in it
exclusively for work.
I also travel with my travel trailer. I work while on the road. Every
trip includes meetings with people, attending conferences. And
me teaching workshops. An example- I am going to Denver for
month of June. While I’m there I will be working about 70%. Round
trip mileage will be about 3800 and I have campground expenses.
What can I write off?
Part of my cottage as a home office ?
My travel trailer?
All of my road trip expenses?
Thank you!
– Clarification about the International tax exposed
– Ali Kim Hoping I can get some insight on this:
If you become a non-resident for tax purposes, and while abroad
you earn income from abroad, but you have your salary sent to
your Canadian bank account, will that make you liable to pay
Canadian taxes?
– How does tax residency work for people staying long term in countries as they travel (but not as residents)
– Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) How does the American 100k off taxes a year thing work?
– At what rough income level should people even be considering non residency status and opening a bank account in another country
– Indira asks: Do taxes vary depending on where one’s based or where one holds citizenship in?
– Indira asks: How do I file taxes and do they vary acc. to profession and pay?
– What is flag theory?
– One of the biggest concerns many digital nomads have is that by being in a country and doing work (even though it’s completely online), they’re violating their tourist visas and/or now owe tax to that country. Is this true?
– What kind of trends in digital nomad taxes do you see moving forward?