Why residency timing is not the whole answer

CFC obligations often depend not on the move as a life event, but on tax status for a specific calendar year. EMET starts by rebuilding the timeline: where the client was resident, which companies were controlled, and which documents already exist.

The question is usually not whether to file or not. The question is for which year, in what scope, and with which supporting documents.

What is checked first

  • tax residency for the reporting period
  • control over the foreign company and the date it ended
  • CFC financial statements and available supporting documents
  • the new jurisdiction and local resident filings

When obligations may end

If the client ceased to be a Russian tax resident, notification and reporting obligations may change. That still requires a careful review of the period, status, and deadlines that have already arisen.

For complex structures, it is useful to prepare one coherent position for the Russian adviser, foreign accountant, bank, and family office. Adjacent notes are collected in Resources.