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golubovski 2 days ago [-]
Did this myself recently. Here is the honest take.
The bureaucracy argument is real. Setting up an Estonian e-residency company is genuinely faster and simpler than a German GmbH. You can do it fully online, banking included if you use a provider like Wise or LHV.
But a few things nobody tells you upfront:
Banking is the friction point. Getting a proper business bank account as an e-resident is harder than it used to be. Most EU banks won't touch you without physical presence. Wise Business works but has limits. Factor this in before you commit.
Your tax situation doesn't change. This is the one people get wrong most often. You still pay taxes where you live. Estonia's 0% corporate tax on retained earnings is attractive but irrelevant if you're paying yourself a salary as a German resident. Talk to a tax advisor before assuming you'll save anything.
For a small SaaS it is probably worth it purely on the simplicity side. Less paperwork, easier to manage remotely, straightforward annual reporting. Just go in with realistic expectations on banking and taxes and you will be fine.
dog436zkj3p7 2 days ago [-]
This is an obviously completely LLM generated response.
dsnr 2 days ago [-]
Not answering your question directly but accounting and taxes are a thing everywhere. EU rules make accounting for companies quite complicated.
Focus on your business, open the smallest and simplest entity you can to validate your product before spending time and money optimizing or scaling things.
That being said, I’m familiar with GmbHs in Germany and I would advise against going this route unless funding is available. Try a sole proprietorship instead if possible.
udl 2 days ago [-]
Thank you! Yes, that's why I'm looking for a simpler and less bureaucratic alternative. I'm totally fine with general accounting and taxes. But I would be happy if there was an alternative somewhere where you don't have to go to a notary for every little change and don't necessarily need a tax advisor because you have to talk to five different tax offices. Germany really makes it more complicated than it needs to be.
I professionally have been helping folks set up and maintain e-Residence and businesses, and all said here in the comments so far tracks: Estonia is absolutely unsurpassed qua administrative ease (this giving you a clear and lasting business advantage), the tax advantages are real, and the jurisdiction only gets better.-
Banking and being scrupulous on your personal taxes at your place of personal residence are issues, but nothing insurmountable, far from it.-
The bureaucracy argument is real. Setting up an Estonian e-residency company is genuinely faster and simpler than a German GmbH. You can do it fully online, banking included if you use a provider like Wise or LHV.
But a few things nobody tells you upfront:
Banking is the friction point. Getting a proper business bank account as an e-resident is harder than it used to be. Most EU banks won't touch you without physical presence. Wise Business works but has limits. Factor this in before you commit.
Your tax situation doesn't change. This is the one people get wrong most often. You still pay taxes where you live. Estonia's 0% corporate tax on retained earnings is attractive but irrelevant if you're paying yourself a salary as a German resident. Talk to a tax advisor before assuming you'll save anything.
For a small SaaS it is probably worth it purely on the simplicity side. Less paperwork, easier to manage remotely, straightforward annual reporting. Just go in with realistic expectations on banking and taxes and you will be fine.
Focus on your business, open the smallest and simplest entity you can to validate your product before spending time and money optimizing or scaling things. That being said, I’m familiar with GmbHs in Germany and I would advise against going this route unless funding is available. Try a sole proprietorship instead if possible.
edit: just stumbled upon this really good blog post about the topic, in case anyone is interested: https://eidel.io/posts/estonias-e-residency-is-awesome-and-s...
Banking and being scrupulous on your personal taxes at your place of personal residence are issues, but nothing insurmountable, far from it.-