why: so the government won’t be able to use your money for whatever the fuck they’re planning for the next 4 years.

as a traveler, none of my money has been funding Israel, for example.

one-step method: you basically fill out one extra tax form called FEIE while you’re doing your taxes, write down the dates you were outside of the country, and then since you aren’t in the country and are not receiving any services from the US, you don’t have to pay income tax up to a certain amount (it’s a little over 125k this year).

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.worksOP
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    14 days ago

    “However, since you don’t pay taxes on that money, it can impact which kinds of retirement accounts you can use, if any”

    The math works out in your favor.

    wouldn’t you rather have that money earning interest now rather than receiving a few hundred later on when you probably don’t need it as much?

    “Also, trying to invest as a US citizen outside the US can suck because of all the agreements with US banks.”

    it can suck, and it can also be awesome.

    I see you’re speaking specifically to Japanese banking standards, which I would agree are one of the more difficult countries for a US citizen to interface with.

    but that’s a great thing about there being about 200 countries.

    Bank somewhere else if you want to.

    try Hong Kong or China or Thailand or Portugal or Sweden or you know, a lot of countries.

    you don’t have to live in the country you bank in.

    • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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      14 days ago

      Yeah, some is specific to Japan, though there will be similar hurdles anywhere the US has an agreement (and that the target country’s institutions actually follow it, I suppose).

      I have a couple of retirement accounts in the US that I contributed to before (I moved overseas in my early 30s) that I basically can’t touch for a number of reasons right now. Just wanted to throw it out there.