earlyretirement
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Oh NO, I'm not claiming to be some expert. I'm far from that on this matter. I've never claimed to be an expert on this. And no one is saying the locals aren't fearing it. All my Porteño friends that own real estate in the USA, have bank accounts, etc. are all very scared. I'm not saying that. I'm more talking about the typical American that got a DNI and retired.I agree. It's hard to know one way or the other. That's my point. People around here (this board) regularly express supreme confidence on the matter, when at best it can only be a hunch or educated guess based on whatever criteria each one uses to think about the matter.
I'm just saying that I've never in my 20+ years and many hundreds of clients that are all foreigners and have DNI's. I've never heard of even one case where Argentina tried to claim a % in asset tax from assets they held abroad. I'm not saying this will never happen. But OP doesn't come across as someone that has to worry too much about this.
Remember that Argentina has had several "tax amnesties" where they allowed locals that were hiding their cash abroad to pay %X and bring it back to Argentina. They were promised that they wouldn't get prosecuted. A shit ton came back into the country. They did this a few times. It's partly why the real estate market peaked in 2019. So much funds came back and IIRC, one of the conditions is they had to invest it in real estate or a local business. Needless to say a lot bought real estate.
Argentina will go after the easy fish. JMHO. Has anyone on this forum known any Ex-pat with DNI OR a local Argentine that were ever penalized or threatened by the Argentina government for assets they held abroad? I don't. And I mean personally heard the story. Not hearsay.
As far as Brazil. Yes, I much prefer Brazil vs. Colombia for everyday living. Honestly, if they spoke Spanish there I'd probably never have gotten married. I doubt I would have left Brazil. I still own a property in Rio. Although I studied Portuguese and conversational, it's a tough language. Also, Rio is super expensive now. Cost of living is very expensive there.
But the girls there are world class.
oddDistribution - what are your top 5 priorities for living? What is the most important criteria to you? Is it cost of living, beautiful girls, safety, things to do, cultural events, dining out? Etc? That is going to dictate where the best place to live is.
I always suggest people figure out their top 5 list and then go backwards. Because if it's just for dating and where the hottest girls are. It's an easy decision and you will end up in Brazil or Colombia.
I still say the best thing to do is find a keeper in Colombia. Live there and really figure out if she is the one. And then move to Buenos Aires. Colombians can easily live in Argentina and easily get permanent residency here. What I did after I got married is I moved my wife's entire family down to Buenos Aires as family is very important to Colombians. I'm talking mother, father, sister, brother. They never wanted to go back to Colombia if that gives you an idea how great Buenos Aires is. Quite honestly, and to be a bit blunt... Colombia is a shit hole compared to Argentina in most aspects.
Plus an added benefit is they all went to college in Argentina. Schools are much better, much safer, much higher quality of life. It wasn't necessarily cheap as they were all on the "payroll" for a while but happy wife = happy life.In my experience, most Colombias once they leave Colombia never want to go back (except to visit family). There is no real reason to go back other than visit family. Brazilians love their country and very passionate about it. They can leave but they always want to go back. Not just to visit family but just because they love Brazil.
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