Lottery wins are tax free in canada.Depends really.
First thing is making sure the ticket is signed and then put in a safe place. Hopefully I don't forget where I put it.
Then consult a tax specialist on best way to either hide it off shore or max returns while paying the least amount of tax.
Change phone number. Then cash the ticket and get out of dodge for a few weeks.
For now. I'm sure taxing lottery winnings will help fight climate change.Lottery wins are tax free in canada.
LOL, but the money you earn off of it isn't. Things like interest, dividends, capital gains.Lottery wins are tax free in canada.
Still better to have lots of money without having to have worked for it. Better to be taxed for a lot of money then not being taxed for not having enough of it.LOL, but the money you earn off of it isn't. Things like interest, dividends, capital gains.
I think you need some financial education.
I clearly didn't mention anything about general interest. That's taxable regardless of where the principal is from. Save your passive aggressive advice buddy.LOL, but the money you earn off of it isn't. Things like interest, dividends, capital gains.
I think you need some financial education.
Once you educate yourself I will.I clearly didn't mention anything about general interest. That's taxable regardless of where the principal is from. Save your passive aggressive advice buddy.
Man, you are a cheapo! If you win a large jackpot, say 30M plus and it's tax-free, why would you care about paying taxes on the interest it generates? The interest alone will earn more than you make in one year now is my bet.LOL, but the money you earn off of it isn't. Things like interest, dividends, capital gains.
I think you need some financial education.
When your interest is being taxed at 50% cap gains and dividends at over 30%, with 30 mill plus invested it ends up being a pretty penny. Make more trying to avoid taxes than by trying to boost your investing game. Monaco starts looking pretty good at that point.Man, you are a cheapo! If you win a large jackpot, say 30M plus and it's tax-free, why would you care about paying taxes on the interest it generates? The interest alone will earn more than you make in one year now is my bet.
If you're 50 plus and can't live like a King for the remainder of your life after winning 30M tax-free or more even with the tax man's filthy little hand in your back pocket then you deserve to be locked up in a small 6 by 6 ft. room with Justin Beiber for a week.When your interest is being taxed at 50% cap gains and dividends at over 30%, with 30 mill plus invested it ends up being a pretty penny. Make more trying to avoid taxes than by trying to boost your investing game. Monaco starts looking pretty good at that point.
Also 1: You can always spend or save more and 2: If the markets go completely fubared you will wish you saved more from a lower tax bill in the past.
That being said, I don't get why someone would move to a sauna like Dubai to save taxes, there are more pleasant options.
Even if you do stay in Canada, only a fool wouldn't try to maximize them gainz though whatever combo of investing and tax avoidance works best. Why the hell should those fuckers get they money, if you really don't want it, give it away to causes that you support like treats for kitties or free medical prostitution for fat guys, or financing an attempt to kill history's greatest monster Justin Beiber.
Why pay taxes if I don't have to?Man, you are a cheapo! If you win a large jackpot, say 30M plus and it's tax-free, why would you care about paying taxes on the interest it generates? The interest alone will earn more than you make in one year now is my bet.
Not really the point is it. I could finance a life of whoring in perpetuity for 20 mill as long as the risk doesn't bite me in the ass.If you're 50 plus and can't live like a King for the remainder of your life after winning 30M tax-free or more even with the tax man's filthy little hand in your back pocket then you deserve to be locked up in a small 6 by 6 ft. room with Justin Beiber for a week.
Wow, you have given this a lot of thought. Now you just need the winning ticket to put all your planning to the test.Not really the point is it. I could finance a life of whoring in perpetuity for 20 mill as long as the risk doesn't bite me in the ass.
But maybe, and here is a crazy idea.. but maybe it's my money and I'd like to spend it how I want as much as possible. ALso maybe just maybe, markets go bad, we get hyper inflation, Justin Beiber fills his evil plans, that 20 mill doesn't look so good anymore.
Or suppose they start bringing in wealth taxes and keep increasing it and lowering the threshold to the point where it's impossible to avoid capital loss in real or nominal terms, because remember much like how taxes are always too high, the "fair share" that the rich should be paying is always more, to be called upon if you have new spending you need to finance. Always more.
Then there is the interest in making sure you are covered if there is some sort of massive live extension breakthrough, or if you have kids or again, you want to leave something behind for some worthy cause.
Then there is always the possibility of spending more. 2 hours a day of whoring is nice, but add a couple of full time live in sugar babies [I mean real sugar babies not amateur hookers/pros marketing themselves as amateur. Suppose you develop the travel bug, that expense can rip through 30 mil no problem, hell a 70 mill budget really can't afford a private plan for cross ocean travel staffed up plus other stuff. Car collections.
I could do what I want with the dividends of 20 million and if I had more I'd use it for diversification and just in case [not quite like the permanent portfolio ideas of Harry Browne but as least somewhat inspired to be partly covered by any event]
A proper estate they say should have 20 servants, that used to be a mill a year, probably more now. Not my bag, but I'd rather have that than give it to the tax man.
Also plenty of mofos win very big lottos and end up on the dole, celebs go broke, etc. WIth your lax attitude towards capital preservation, you seem like the sort who could very easily go down that road.
Shit happens, and desires for many are infinate. Not me, I really can't see going beyond 700K a year, although if I wanted say a 4 girl full time harem, I'd need I'd guess twice as much and if I did want to do that on after tax dividends and not count on capital gains, well I couldn't on 30 mil. 40 yeah but again I'd be spending every dime of my dividend income on it. But hey dividends of bank stocks never ever go down. National Bank circa 1980s enters the chat, BMO great depression and again WWII enters the chat. Manulife very recently enters the chat.
If I had lotto money the biggest thing for me is not the chance to blow everything and die broke, it's to be able to finance a good stream of income, but one that is resisitant if not proof vs any economic outcome, and quite frankly 70 mill isn't enough because you want at the very least stocks for the good times, an annuity for a base, bonds for a deflationary crash and gold for the old hyper inflation... and hope you don't get a strink of them back to back. Add to that some asshat hate monger like Bernie Sanders getting in control in Canada and I'd need a lot more, or have to cut back on my dream lifestyle.
Hell I wouldn't mind bringing home after tax 600 mill cash value, I can diversify on asset class and geographically on a major scale.
Again I wouldn't live in some humid arm pit bleak desert like Dubai but it sure would be a consideration. Plenty of options of places to live and money can take care of many issues of many locations.
It's a hobby I have. I like to plan.Wow, you have given this a lot of thought. Now you just need the winning ticket to put all your planning to the test.
You would be taxable on your global income unless you either leave Canada and sever ties or you need financial education about how to commit a financial crimeLOL, but the money you earn off of it isn't. Things like interest, dividends, capital gains.
I think you need some financial education.