julia_en_ruta
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- Dec 3, 2022
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Having just gotten my rentista residency approval (woo hoo!), I thought I'd write a couple of notes on my situation for anyone in the future looking for info about whether it's possible to have a successful application as a freelance consultant with clients outside of Argentina. I can't really offer advice on other people's specific situations beyond "talk to an attorney". Of course, as the eternal disclaimer, the rules could change at any minute based on various political whims, and for all I know the success in repeating this could be dependent on whether or not the migraciones staffer had enough lunch that day or Boca lost the championship game, or whatever.
- I have a US-based LLC. My invoices are paid to the LLC.
- I used an attorney (Celano) to complete this process, which I would recommend.
- It took me around six months to collect documentation, get things apostilled, etc. before I submitted everything. I didn't need to submit new FBI fingerprint forms even though they technically expired halfway through the data collection process, but I also didn't leave the country once I started getting paperwork together.
- I worked with an accountant in the US to have him review the LLC's bank statements and verify that I consistently had enough income coming from the business to my personal account to meet the requirement. He provided an apostilled statement to that effect.
- Once I had the precaria in-hand, I used it to get a CUIL.
- With the CUIL and precaria together I was able to talk my way into getting a basic dual-currency bank account at Santander (not easily -- see my note in this thread) to start transferring the monthly minimum amount. Previously that could be WU transfers to a peso account, but apparently they just changed it to require a SWIFT transfer that's received in dollars. I've been able to receive dollars directly into my dollar account through SWIFT without them being pesified, but I have to submit a form in person every time I want them to be deposited into the account.
- Once everything was submitted it took almost four months to get the decision. This was long enough that my precaria had to be renewed twice and the attorney's office submitted an amparo por mora.