Missing a lot of relevant context.
What happened on departure after having passed 90 days?
Was the appropriate fine duly paid?
If there’s been no overstay then you’re rolling the dice with the odds heavily in your favor.
The risk is that a particularly nasty officer starts doing the math and decides you are a de facto resident abusing the tourist mechanism.
Even then, the fact that you can show that you are working on permanent residence should probably help for some while.
Long-term this is probably untenable.
Serious question: can you simply create not plausible but actual deniability for your company, by not telling them you have become a permanent resident?
They hired a US citizen with a US address, your work is distance work, do they have to know that you are in Argentina?
If ever an issue comes up (extremely unlikely as long as you stay off AFIP’s radar and keep your paycheck coming to your US account), why cross that bridge when you get to it?
Nothing happened because I always fly out of Argentina after 4-6 weeks, so I have never exceeded 90 days in one stay. But, over that past 12 months I have exceeded 180 days in Argentina and I thought I read here that 180 days was the max for a tourist.
I was in the process of doing the Radex permanent residency application via my Argentinian-born son but stopped after I became worried it would generate a tax event for my company if Argentina determined that a foreign company was employing an Argentinian resident.
If he is denied entry we will know that having an Argentine child in the country is not grounds for abusing the tourist visa.Fiscal has a child who is Argentine correct? What happens in a case where the parent is denied entry when they have an Argentine child in the country? Has this ever happened that we know of?
Son should have been child.If having the child in Argentina has already worked a few times, then hat's off to migraciones for having a heart, but I wouldn't bet on being able to renter indefinitely in the future if that's the reason, even if his son was traveling with him..
PS: I believe that juantime has an Argentine wife (or a wife with Argentine residency). She was allowed to enter the country while he was sent back where he came from. I wonder if (and or why) it would make any difference to migraciones if Fiscal's child is actually in Argentina when he tries to reenter.