What Is Tax Residency?
Tax residency is a legal status based on your ties and presence in a country—not your passport or visa type.
Common Tests Countries Use
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- Days in-country (e.g., 183‑day rules) – presence for part of the year can trigger residency.
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- Home & ties – where you keep a permanent home, spouse/children, belongings.
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- Centre of life/economic interests – where you work, bank, vote, run a business.
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- Intention – evidence you plan to live there or have ceased living there.
Why Residency Matters
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- Scope of tax: Residents usually report worldwide income; non‑residents report only local‑source income.
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- Treaty relief: If two countries claim you, a tax treaty can break the tie.
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- Split years: The year you arrive/leave may be split between resident and non‑resident periods.
Common Expat Scenarios
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- -Move mid‑year for work and keep a home/family in your old country.
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- -Work remotely abroad but payroll remains in your old country.
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- -Keep significant ties (home, spouse, bank accounts) after moving.
Mistakes to Avoid
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- -Relying only on the 183‑day rule—ties can outweigh days.
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- -Assuming a visa decides tax status (it doesn’t).
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- -Ignoring tax treaty tie‑breaker rules when two countries claim you.
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- -Not keeping evidence (travel log, lease, job contract, school records).
Felix’s Quick Tips
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- -Keep a travel diary and proof of days in/out.
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- -Document homes, leases, family, employment—these prove ties.
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- -Read the relevant tax treaty before moving.
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- -Consider a short residency ruling or professional advice if your situation is borderline.
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An Australian expat → check the Australia Expat Tax Guide for superannuation rules.
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A Canadian expat → see the Canada Expat Tax Guide for RRSP and TFSA rules.
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For more insights, browse the full Expat Tax Tips & Insights.
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