Hate Taxes? Move To Tax-Free Puerto Rico, Stay American, Avoid IRS

…and you don’t have to ditch your U.S. passport.

Puerto Rico is a U.S. Commonwealth. It is part of the U.S. but in some ways still independent. It’s tax system is a hybrid, part of the U.S. and not.

If you can really move yourself and/or your business, you may be able to cut your income taxes down to almost nothing. You have to be careful, though. The interaction between the IRS and taxman in Puerto Rico is nuanced, requiring some Puerto Ricans to file with the IRS, some with the Puerto Rico Department of Finance, and some with both. But there are great incentives by which Puerto Rico hopes to lure American mainlanders there.

The incentives include an income tax in Puerto Rico of only 4%. Compare that to your combined federal and state income tax burden you may pay now! Legally avoid the 39.6% federal rate and the 13.3% California (or other state) rate?

What’s more, there is no tax on dividends. If you are receiving distributions of company profits or have investments yielding dividends, they are tax-free. There’s also no capital gain tax in Puerto Rico. If you sell your company, sell real estate, sell shares in public companies, you name it, no capital gain tax.

But several cautions are in order. There are rules to limit big appreciation from the past and moving there right before you sell (in that example, you pay a 5% tax). But even more fundamentally, you have to actually move. Your tax home—your real home—must be in Puerto Rico. Remember, just like any move from one state to another, it has to look and be real.

Try to avoid messy facts that don’t look like a permanent move. If possible, sell your home, move your family, sever connections to your old local clubs, etc. After all, if you are later ruled not to be a Puerto Rico resident, the IRS is back in the picture asking for back taxes, penalties and interest.

To qualify, an individual must not have been a resident of Puerto Rico within in the last 15 years. You must become a resident of Puerto Rico by December 31, 2035, and you must reside there for at least 183 days a year. You also have to do the paperwork, filing an application with the tax authority there. Once that’s approved, it’s a binding contract and you’ll get:

  • Tax-free interest and dividends earned after you become a resident.
  • No long-term capital gains tax on appreciation after you become a resident.
  • 5% tax on long-term capital gain for appreciation before you move for any sales during your first 10 years as a resident.

Puerto Rico also has great incentives for business owners. If you have a business that can be moved, that can be a real tax home run both for you and the company.

INTELLIGENCE BRIEF: PUERTO RICO

PUBLISHER: OUTPOST PROVISIONING LLC© 2014 OUTPOST PROVISIONING LLC. All rights reserved. Published in the U.S.A.

DATE: 11/10/2014