Captured from Telegram, 2026-07-02. Originated from dinner with Connor at Chingaari (Buderim, Sunshine Coast QLD, 2026-07-01), where Connor mentioned his Europe trip. The conversation seeded an idea: a period of time living in central Europe, primarily for a more entrepreneurial environment + lower small-business tax. (Prior recall anchored this dinner to Belconnen/Canberra — corrected 2026-07-05; the actual venue is Chingaari Indian Restaurant on Burnett St, Buderim, SC.)
"The taxes in Australia, specifically those imposed on small businesses, are a concern. Setting up a small business here isn't exactly incentivized by the taxation system, especially with the new taxes coming in this year."
"Ideally, I'm looking for somewhere in central Europe."
"Connor was quite adamant that London would be an okay location. I am a little cautious about London, though, as many people seem to leave there for the same reasons they leave Australia or other parts of the UK."
"This is just an idea for the next few years."
Three specific 2026 measures hit small businesses from 1 July 2026:
Net read: the macro tax policy direction is loosening CGT + asset write-off (good for startup founders), but the compliance direction is tightening (Payday Super hits anyone who hires). Both reinforce the "build a small, lean, IP-led business that doesn't hire locally" strategic shape.
Australia has WHV-class reciprocal agreements with 34 partner countries/jurisdictions. The relevant European ones for this brainstorm:
Eastern EU (Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Croatia, Romania, Bulgaria, Switzerland) are NOT on either list — those need a different path: DNV, startup visa, or self-employment visa.
Goal-adjusted ranking: small business + low tax + entrepreneurial environment + English livable.
| City | Visa path | Corp tax | PIT (top) | Watch |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Budapest | WHV available | 9% flat (lowest flat in EU) | 9-15% flat | Form Hungarian company; EU rules for residence |
| Prague | WHV available | 19% / 21% | 15% up to ~36× avg wage, 23% above | IP Box 5% for software/IP businesses |
| Tallinn | NOT WHV; DNV or Startup Visa | 0% on retained profits | 22% on distributed profits + €700/mo allowance | Must go digital nomad visa or startup visa |
| City | Visa path | Corp tax | PIT (top) | Watch |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lisbon | WHV; D8 nomad; D7; IFICI | 21% (mainland) | 14.5-48% | IFICI: 20% flat 10yrs for STEM/research founders; replaces old NHR |
| Barcelona / Madrid | WHV | 25% | 19-47% (regional: up to 54% Catalonia) | Beckham Law: flat 24% up to €600k × 6 yrs if qualify |
| Berlin | WHV; §21 AufenthG freelance | 30% (Körperschaft) | 0-45% + 7-17% trade tax | High tax but unmatched startup depth |
| Milan | WHV; Italia Startup Visa (30-day) | 24% | 23-43% | Italia Startup Visa = 30 days, no min investment if formally "innovative" |
| Amsterdam | WHV; Startup Visa (Dutch incubator); 30% ruling | 19% | 9.7-49.5% | 30% ruling (5-yr tax-free salary allowance) makes it very competitive for employed; expensive cost of living |
| City | Visa path | Tax | Watch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sofia, Bulgaria | Bulgaria startup visa (€300 residency) | 10% flat PIT + CIT (lowest in EU) | Eurozone joined Jan 2026; 25% operational expense deduction → ~7.5% effective; English OK in tech |
Connor's reasoning: London has the ecosystem, the English, the network. Nathan's caution: people leave London for the same reasons they leave Sydney (cost, weather, lifestyle saturation, distance from nature).
Tax reality in London: UK income tax 20-45%, NIC 8-12%, Corp tax 25%, plus 39% CGT on residential property (28% on second homes). The UK does have startup visas and the SEIS/EIS schemes for angel investors, but the personal tax burden is structurally heavier than the continental options above. The UK's edge is ecosystem depth (especially fintech, AI), not tax.
If London is on the table seriously: the question is whether ecosystem depth outweighs a ~15-30% higher total tax burden than Budapest/Prague/Tallinn for the same kind of work. For a founder whose business is software IP, the answer is usually no (the ecosystem is the same remote; the tax savings compound).
If the goal is "live abroad for 2-3 years, run the business remotely, save on tax":
If the goal is "build an EU-based startup with EU staff, customers, and an EU entity":
If the goal is "taste-test Europe with optionality":