You probably need professional advice from a solicitor and/or tax advisor specialising in immigration/domicile/residence issues.What are you views on this ? Will I still be able to retain my non domiciled status or can that be challenged ?
This is both unenforceable and unenforced! You’re perfectly entitled to Irish citizenship if you want it.Quote from above link :
"You must intend to reside in Ireland after you become a citizen"
Will I still be able to retain my non domiciled status
I would wonder if your current (?) (self determined?) non-domicile status is actually sound?I have been living in Ireland for a long time, moved from Germany in the mid 90s. I have house, wife, family, job, social activities all in Ireland.
As I say, I suspect that you need professional/expert advice on this especially if you are/have been making tax or other significant decisions based on assumptions (?) about your non-domicile status.In legal terms, domicile is the place where a person has a fixed and permanent home and to which, where the person is absent from that place, they have the intention of returning.
Domicile extends beyond the simple notion of a place of residence and signifies living in a country with the intent to remain there permanently. It denotes a permanent legal residence where one has the most significant connections, such as property ownership, voting registration, and family ties. In contrast, the concept of residence simply refers to where a person lives, either temporarily or permanently.
Aren’t US tax requirements based on citizenship not domicile.to try avoid paying US taxes on worldwide income, I think they would have to keep US domicile - again not expert opinion
Looks like it alright, but getting Irish citizenship does not remove the US citizenship or the tax on worldwide income due there, so it still works as an example where adding Irish nationality wouldn't affect US tax status.Aren’t US tax requirements based on citizenship not domicile.
As Strangelove stated Domicile is a very tricky concept. Not to be confused with tax residence or indeed residence, and even more confusing as tax rules differ depending on each countries own rules. Really there is no expert that can give you a definitive answer. But the advice you were given is sound to me based on my knowledge of this area. It is indeed exceedingly difficult to shed your domicile of origin.Thanks for the replies. I will take some tax advise. In reality I did take some in relation to my domicile many many years ago when I was still single, renting and had no family. The tax adviser told me back then that it's very difficult to shed your domicile of origin and aquire a new one. You need to completely severe the links with your original country. If you have properties in your original country, passport, you vote in the elections, travel there a few times are year, pay taxes there and plan to move back at a specific point in time, these are strong links that would make you non domiciled in Ireland. Anyway things may have changed in the meantime so I will get some new advise as it may not be worth getting Irish citizenship...
What happens when two tax authorities disagree on where someone’s domicile is?
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