# Paraguay for Crypto Nomads: How to Legally Pay 0% on Your Gains

> Sitting on appreciated crypto in a high-tax country? Paraguay residency at 0% on foreign-source gains is real, but only if you time the realisation right.

**Author:** Felix Yanez-Bowker (Co-Founder, NomadTaxHelp)
**Published:** 2026-04-17
**Canonical URL:** https://blog.nomadtaxhelp.com/posts/paraguay-crypto-tax-residency
**Category:** paraguay
**Tags:** paraguay, crypto, tax-residency, capital-gains, bitcoin

## Summary

Paraguay taxes foreign-source income (including foreign-exchange and foreign-wallet crypto gains) at 0%. The catch: you must be tax-resident in Paraguay AND cleanly out of your old country BEFORE you realise the gain. Timing is everything.

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Spain wants 26%. Germany wants up to 45% if you held under a year. France will take 30% flat. Paraguay wants 0% on foreign-source crypto. The catch isn't whether the rule exists. It does, and it's written into law. The catch is timing. Sell first and your old country still owns the gain. Get residency in place first and you keep all of it.

## How Paraguay treats crypto

Paraguay is a [territorial tax](/glossary#territorial-taxation) country. The state taxes income earned **inside** Paraguay. Income earned outside (foreign salaries, foreign dividends, foreign capital gains) sits outside the tax base. There's no capital gains tax line item for offshore crypto. There's no exit tax. There's no wealth tax.

For crypto specifically that means:

- Coins held in self-custody wallets you control from Paraguay, but on foreign chains, are foreign-source.
- Trades on foreign exchanges (Kraken, Bitstamp, Bybit, Coinbase) are foreign-source.
- DeFi activity on Ethereum, Solana, or any L2 is foreign-source.
- An NFT bought and sold on a foreign marketplace is foreign-source.

The boundary case is if you start running a Paraguay-registered crypto business or trading operation. Then you've created Paraguay-source income and that gets taxed locally. For someone moving in to realise a personal portfolio, that's not the situation you're in.

This isn't a loophole. It's how Paraguay's territorial system is written. Argentinians, Brazilians, and increasingly Europeans have been using it for decades for exactly this kind of structure.

> Foreign-source ≠ "I held it abroad." It means the economic source of the gain is outside Paraguay. For crypto traded on foreign infrastructure with no Paraguayan counterparty, that test is met by default.

## What your home country wants

This is where most European holders get stung. Most countries tax worldwide income while you're tax-resident, and crypto is firmly inside the net.

The number that matters isn't the headline rate. It's what's left after the state has had its cut and you wire the rest. On a six-figure realisation, the gap between Spain and Paraguay is the price of a small flat in Asunción. On a seven-figure realisation, it's the price of a house in Lisbon.

## The realisation-timing strategy

This is the part nobody emphasises enough. Paraguay residency is **not retroactive**. If you realise a gain while still tax-resident in Spain, Spain owns that gain. Becoming Paraguayan after the fact does nothing for that tax year.

The order has to be:

1. **Paraguay residency in place.** [Cédula](/glossary#cedula) issued, [RUC](/glossary#ruc) opened, address registered, ideally a [tax residency certificate](/glossary#trc) (TRC) for the year if you can pull it together early.
2. **Old country tax residency cleanly broken.** Deregistered from the padrón in Spain, abgemeldet in Germany, P85 filed in the UK, [tie-breaker](/glossary#tie-breaker-rule) tests not pulling you back.
3. **Then** the sale, swap, or whatever the realisation event is.

What counts as a realisation for crypto:

- Selling BTC, ETH, or any coin for fiat.
- Swapping one coin for another (yes, BTC → ETH is a taxable event in most European jurisdictions).
- Using crypto to pay for something.
- Adding to a liquidity pool, in many cases.
- Trading an NFT.
- Receiving a token through a hard fork or airdrop, in some jurisdictions.

What does **not** trigger realisation:

- Moving coins between your own wallets.
- Holding through a price increase.
- Borrowing against the position (a loan is not a sale, a popular structure for people who want liquidity without realisation).

> The single biggest mistake: getting Paraguay residency, then selling the same week from a Spanish IP, with the proceeds going to a Spanish bank account, while still on the Spanish tax roll. The Paraguay paper means nothing in that scenario. Spain still has the gain. Sequence and substance matter more than the cédula in your wallet.

## Worked example: €500k Bitcoin position, €400k gain

You bought €100k of Bitcoin a few cycles ago. It's now worth €500k. You want to take €400k of gain off the table. Here's what each path actually delivers.

The Spain-to-Paraguay delta on this trade is **€104k**. The Germany-short-hold-to-Paraguay delta is **€168k**. NomadTaxHelp's most expensive Paraguay tier (Ultra+) costs $4,750. The maths writes itself.

## The myths

**"Paraguay is shady."** It isn't. Paraguay joined the [OECD's Common Reporting Standard](/glossary#crs) framework in 2021 and now exchanges financial information automatically with over 100 jurisdictions. It's not on the EU's tax haven list. It's a normal Latin American country with a territorial tax system, like Costa Rica, Panama, or Singapore. There's a long, separate post on this if you want the detail: [is Paraguay tax residency legit](/posts/is-paraguay-tax-residency-legit).

**"Banks won't accept Paraguay residency."** They will, with the right documents. The cédula alone is thin paper. The cédula plus RUC plus a tax residency certificate plus a Paraguay utility bill plus a clean exit from your old jurisdiction is a compliant onboarding pack at any reputable EMI or private bank. The banks that resist are usually the ones that don't want non-resident retail anyway.

**"CRS will reveal the move and that's a problem."** CRS revealing the move is the system working correctly. You **want** your old country to see, via CRS, that you became tax-resident elsewhere on date X. That's the audit trail that closes their claim on you. The problem isn't CRS. It's having a sloppy paper trail when CRS reports come through.

**"You have to actually live in Paraguay full-time."** No. Paraguay does not impose a [183-day rule](/glossary#day-count-test) the way most European countries do. You need to maintain the residency with the basic substance the law requires, and avoid being pulled back into your old country's tax net by tie-breakers. That's a different test, and it's the one most people mess up.

## The clean-exit checklist for crypto holders

If you take nothing else from this post, take this list. In order.

1. **Custody migration.** Move coins to wallets and exchanges that match your new residency story. Withdraw from any exchange that has you on file as a Spanish/German/Italian resident. Open new accounts under your Paraguay address and cédula. Don't sell from an exchange that thinks you're still in Madrid.
2. **Deregister.** Padrón in Spain, Abmeldung in Germany, P85 in the UK, residency cancellation form in Italy. Get the certificate of deregistration on file. Date matters.
3. **Document the timeline.** Residency-in-place date in Paraguay must precede the realisation date. Keep proof of both: cédula issue date, plane tickets, hotel/rental receipts in Asunción, deregistration certificates.
4. **Pull a Paraguayan tax residency certificate** for the year of the sale. This is the single most useful document if your old country ever queries the move.
5. **Don't trade through your old country's IP and banking.** Use a Paraguayan or international address. Don't let the proceeds land in a Spanish bank you forgot to close. Don't sell from a hotel in Barcelona. Substance follows behaviour.
6. **Mind the tie-breaker.** If you keep a flat, a partner, and kids in school in your old country, tax authorities can argue your "centre of vital interests" never moved. Treaty tie-breaker tests are real. Plan around them.

> A well-timed move can save more in tax than most people earn in a decade. A badly-timed move costs the same tax bill as if you'd never moved, plus the cost of moving. The single decision worth getting right is the **order of operations**.

## Where this lands: Paraguay

Of the handful of 0% crypto residency options on the table (UAE, Cayman, BVI, Andorra at low-not-zero, Monaco, Bahamas), Paraguay is the lowest cost, the fastest, and the simplest. No real-estate purchase. No deposit. No minimum income. A single short setup visit. Total facilitated cost lands between $2,500 and $4,750 with us, and the ongoing maintenance is trivial. The full cost breakdown is in the [Paraguay residency cost post](/posts/paraguay-tax-residency-cost-2026).

If you're working through which European exit jurisdiction fits, the [European nomad tax playbook](/posts/european-nomad-tax-playbook) compares the options. If you're a Portugal NHR holder watching the regime sunset, [the NHR replacement post](/posts/portugal-nhr-replacement-2026) covers what to do next.

NomadTaxHelp isn't a tax or legal adviser. We coordinate with licensed partners who are. Everything here is educational. Confirm anything specific to your situation with a professional.

If you're sitting on a position you want to realise, and especially if you're on a clock because of a market move or a regulatory change in your home country, [book a free 20-minute clarity call](https://cal.com/nomadtaxhelp/clarity-call) and I'll map the timing with you. For the full process end-to-end: [the complete Paraguay setup guide](/posts/paraguay-tax-residency-guide).
## Frequently asked questions

### Does Paraguay actually tax crypto at 0%?

Foreign-source crypto gains (sales on foreign exchanges, swaps in foreign wallets, DeFi activity outside Paraguay) sit outside the territorial tax base. There's no capital gains tax on them. Paraguay-source income (a Paraguayan business, a local trade) is taxed normally.

### What counts as 'realising' a crypto gain?

Selling for fiat, swapping one coin for another, spending crypto, certain DeFi events like liquidity provision, and NFT trades all typically count. The tax-relevant moment is when the position changes hands, not when you eventually wire fiat to a bank.

### If I get Paraguay residency today, can I sell tomorrow and pay 0%?

Only if you are no longer tax-resident in your old country on the day of the sale. Paraguay residency on its own doesn't override Spanish or German tax residency. You need both sides done (Paraguay in, old country out) before the realisation event.

### Will my bank flag a Paraguay residency move?

CRS reporting will share your tax residency change with relevant authorities. That's the system working as intended for a legitimate move. Banks generally accept Paraguay residency provided you have the cédula, RUC, tax certificate, and a clean paper trail.

### Is Paraguay seen as a tax haven?

Paraguay isn't on the EU or OECD blacklists. It joined the CRS framework in 2021 and exchanges information automatically. It's a territorial tax country, not a zero-tax secrecy jurisdiction: a meaningful legal distinction.

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NomadTaxHelp is not a tax or legal adviser. We coordinate with licensed partners. Educational content only — confirm specifics with a professional.

Book a free clarity call: https://cal.com/nomadtaxhelp/clarity-call
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