
How a remote consulting business reduced tax complexity with Paraguay residency
For many remote consultants, tax complexity grows faster than revenue. Multiple clients, cross-border payments, and constant travel often result in unclear obligations and rising compliance costs. This case-style article shows how a remote consulting business simplified its tax position by relocating personal tax residency to Paraguay, without disrupting clients or operations.

Why aggressive tax planning usually backfires
Aggressive tax planning often looks attractive on paper: lower taxes, complex structures, and promises of “bulletproof” legality. In practice, these setups tend to increase risk, costs, and stress, while delivering diminishing returns over time. This article explains why aggressive tax planning usually backfires and what to focus on instead.

How to structure a remote business after changing tax residency
Changing your tax residency is a major milestone for any founder or freelancer, but it is only the first step. To actually benefit from the move and avoid compliance issues, your remote business needs to be restructured deliberately: legally, operationally, and financially. This article explains how to align your company structure, workflows, and decision-making processes with your new tax reality.

Lessons learned from relocating tax residency as a digital nomad
Relocating tax residency as a digital nomad often looks simple from the outside, but the real challenges appear in the details. The biggest lessons rarely come from tax rates or destinations, but from how systems, behaviors, and assumptions interact across borders. This article distills practical lessons learned from going through the process firsthand.

Can you keep EU clients while being tax resident in Paraguay?
Becoming a tax resident of Paraguay does not mean you must give up EU clients. In most cases, you can continue working with European customers legally and smoothly, as long as your business structure, contracts, and tax setup are aligned with your new residency. This article explains what actually matters and where founders most often make mistakes.