Answer 5 questions about where you live, work, and earn. Get a plain-English report on how tax rules generally work for a situation like yours, and what to take to a professional.
No jargon, no 80-page forms. Five questions about your situation, mapped against the tax rules that most commonly come into play.
Your living situation, how many countries are in your picture, and whether you have income or assets in more than one place. No tax knowledge required.
⏱ ~90 secondsWe cross-reference your answers against tax residency rules, treaty networks, and expat-specific exemptions for each relevant country.
⏱ ~20 secondsA clear, country-by-country explanation of how the rules generally apply to a situation like yours, the areas that usually matter, and the questions to take to a professional, delivered as a PDF to your inbox.
⏱ Instant deliveryMost resources just tell you to "consult a tax professional." We explain how the rules generally work for a situation like yours, so you know exactly what to ask them.
The risk check shows which countries usually matter for a situation like yours. The full report explains how the rules generally work, country by country. The Deepdive checks that against your real documents.
Five questions about your situation. Understand what level of complexity your tax picture typically carries, before you spend a dollar.
A clear, country-by-country explanation of how the rules generally apply to a situation like yours, delivered as a PDF to your inbox.
Everything in the full report, with the explanation reflecting your actual documents instead of estimates. Upload what you are comfortable sharing.
Each document you share gives the report more to work with. More context means the report can explain more specifically which rules and thresholds tend to apply to situations like yours. Share only what you are comfortable sharing.
| Document | What it helps the report understand | What it adds to your report |
|---|---|---|
| Passport photo page | Which country's personal tax rules and treaties are most likely relevant | Personal residency and nationality context |
| Last tax return (home country) | What positions have generally been taken before and where the picture may have changed | Historical filing and continuity context |
| Bank statement (foreign account) | Which foreign account reporting thresholds are typically relevant for a situation like yours | Foreign account reporting context |
| Employment contract or payslip | Where income is likely sourced and which country's employment tax rules usually apply | Income source and employer country context |
| Property ownership document | Which wealth tax and capital gains rules tend to be relevant for assets in that location | Property and asset location context |
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"I'd been losing sleep about back taxes in Spain. In 90 seconds AbroadLedger showed me how the 183-day residency rule generally works, so I finally understood the basics. Worth $29 just for the peace of mind."
"I already knew about US filing but had no idea how Germany's rules worked. The report explained a treaty provision I'd never heard of, so I walked into my accountant call already understanding the basics."
"The disclaimer is honest: it's not tax advice. But it's exactly the right level of information to have a real conversation with an accountant. Way better than Googling for 3 hours."
Free risk check. No account. No jargon.
Educational information only. This explains how tax rules generally work for situations like yours. It is not tax, legal, or financial advice, not a recommendation, and not a conclusion about what you owe or should do. Consult a qualified tax professional before making any decision.