The Cross-Border Tax Insider

The Cross-Border Tax Insider

A curated set of resources from Vasily Vitalyev on cross-border tax planning, decision modeling, and the tools I actually use.

Important: Nothing on this page or anywhere on this blog is financial, tax, legal, or investment advice. I write from personal experience and public sources. You are responsible for your own decisions. When stakes are high, consult a licensed professional in your country. I’m a business advisor for Taixable and disclose this in every post that mentions the platform.

What this page is for

If you’ve landed here, you’re probably trying to make sense of one of these questions:

  • Should I model the tax consequences of a major move before I make it, and how?
  • How do tools like Taixable compare to a Big-4 engagement, an independent professional, or DIY analysis?
  • What does “validated tax content” actually mean, and why should I care?
  • What are the real costs of cross-border financial decisions that don’t show up in the headline tax rate?

The posts below are the longer-form pieces I’ve written that try to answer those questions in depth. I link to Taixable in each of them where it’s genuinely the right tool for the situation, and to other tools or resources where they’re better suited.

Start here: the framework

If you read one piece, read this one. It walks through the framework I use for any major cross-border financial decision, when modeling pays for itself, and how to decide between DIY analysis, structured tools, and professional help.

Why most software gets cross-border wrong

The starting point for understanding why this category of tools even needs to exist. Generic single-country tax software breaks down the moment your situation crosses borders, and most cross-border-aware tools aren’t actually cross-border-aware.

Pre-decision modeling: the highest-leverage exercise

Two pieces on the practice of modeling tax outcomes before you act. The cost of getting this wrong is much higher than the cost of doing it properly.

Validated rules versus AI answers

The risk with any tax tool — including AI assistants and chatbots — is producing a confident answer that’s wrong. This piece covers what “validated rules” actually means and why the distinction matters more than the surface user experience.

Country deep-dives that mention the modeling angle

Two practical country pieces where the cross-border modeling question comes up directly.

About Taixable

Taixable is a cross-border tax planning platform built around what they call a Validated Rules Model: every rule is sourced and reviewed before it’s used in a calculation, with disclosure of where each piece of information came from. The platform is designed for people whose financial situation crosses borders and who can’t get useful answers from generic tax software or generic personal finance content.

The two products that fit most readers of this blog:

  • The Pro subscription — ongoing access to country guides, planning tools, and rule updates as laws change
  • The Decision Report — a structured one-off analysis for a specific cross-border decision (a job offer, a relocation, an asset sale, a stock-option exercise). Useful when you don’t need ongoing access but want a clean modeling exercise before you act

You can see the current pricing and product lineup at taixable.com. As I disclose in every post, I’m a business advisor for the company. I don’t get paid per click or per signup from this blog — I link to Taixable when I think it’s the right tool for the situation, and to other tools or resources when those are the better fit.

Other useful resources I link to in posts

Cross-border tax work isn’t a single-tool category. The resources I find myself linking to most often, alongside Taixable:

  • IRS International Taxpayers — for US-citizen-specific rules
  • HMRC — for UK rules, including the Statutory Residence Test
  • Wise — for the operational side of multi-currency banking
  • Nomad List — for cost-of-living and lifestyle research, with the caveat that the tax data on most aggregator sites is unreliable

Other landing pages on this blog

Want to go deeper?

Browse the full blog archive for everything I’ve written, or jump straight to Taixable if you’ve already decided you want to model your specific situation.

For questions, post suggestions, or anything else, see the contact page.

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