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The Cross-Border Wealth Playbook · Free Tool

Where are you tax-resident?

The 183-day rule is a starting point, not the whole story. Track the days you spend in each country against the threshold that makes you resident — and see where you are at risk, where you may be resident in two places at once, and what to confirm before it matters.

Your days this tax year
Your residency picture
Thresholds default to 183 days — change them to each country's real rule. Many countries use lower thresholds, rolling 12-month windows, or ties-based tests where days are only one factor.
Why the day count is only the beginning

Residence turns on your life, not just your calendar.

Countries decide tax residence with a mix of tests: a day count (often, but not always, 183), whether you have a home available to you, and where your centre of life is — your family, work, and ties. You can be under 183 days everywhere and still be resident somewhere because that is where your life is. And if two countries both claim you, you are dual-resident, and only a tax treaty's tie-breaker decides which one wins.

01

Days

How many days, under whose counting rule — calendar year or rolling window, partial and transit days included or not?

02

A home available

A home kept ready for you — even unused — can keep you resident in a country you thought you had left.

03

Centre of life

Where your family, work, and economic ties sit. The catch-all that overrides a low day count.

The full method is in The Cross-Border Wealth Playbook.

Forty chapters and a ten-model companion workbook on where you are taxed, how not to be taxed twice, where to hold what you own, the move itself, and passing it on across borders. Get the chapter on residency tests and the launch notice.

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Educational orientation only — not tax, legal, or immigration advice, and not a substitute for a qualified cross-border adviser. Residency thresholds, counting rules, and treaty tie-breakers vary by country and change; the defaults here are illustrative. Confirm your position for each country, in the current year, before relying on it. If you are a US person, citizenship-based taxation means this tool does not change your US obligations.
Educational references and tools — not legal, tax, accounting, or investment advice, and not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Consult a qualified professional about your specific situation. © 2026 The Baratelli Institute.