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1. daniel+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-07-19 22:55:40
For virtually every other jurisdiction, natural persons pay tax where they live, not where they source their income.

If I happen to work for a foreign corporation, I don’t get to skip paying tax.

replies(2): >>voxic1+12 >>shivas+62
2. voxic1+12[view] [source] 2025-07-19 23:11:12
>>daniel+(OP)
In the US you pay taxes in the state where you earn the income and where you live. So for example if you own a pass-though tax corporation and it earns income in all states then you must file and pay taxes in all states.
3. shivas+62[view] [source] 2025-07-19 23:12:18
>>daniel+(OP)
Not true. This is only true for US which taxes your global income.

Most of the world taxes only income earned in that country.

> If I happen to work for a foreign corporation, I don’t get to skip paying tax.

Sure, because you earned it your country, and not in the country of domicile of foreign corporation.

EDIT: Correction, I see now that most countries do tax worldwide income, just that they have DTA so you offset taxes paid abroad.

replies(1): >>pmyteh+Cz1
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4. pmyteh+Cz1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-20 15:43:01
>>shivas+62
We (the UK) have a very extensive set of double taxation treaties too. The point of non-dom status is that it doesn't even matter if your earnings were taxed elsewhere: they're still not liable in the UK.
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