1. Personal profile
We map citizenships, income sources, business ownership, family needs, travel, banking, and risk tolerance.
After Canada
Leaving Canada is only one side of the move. We help you compare potential residency, banking, and setup pathways as part of a private-client global exit strategy, then coordinate with local professionals where jurisdiction-specific advice is required.
Foreign residency, banking, and territorial-tax jurisdiction shortlisting, usually scoped inside Private Client strategy.
We do not treat country selection as a generic listicle. A founder, retiree, remote worker, investor, and family with school-age children can need very different banking and residency infrastructure.
CanadianExit can help build a shortlist and coordinate with professionals operating in a broad range of territorial and foreign-source tax jurisdictions.
We map citizenships, income sources, business ownership, family needs, travel, banking, and risk tolerance.
You receive a practical shortlist of countries or regions worth deeper review, with tradeoffs clearly stated.
Where needed, we coordinate with qualified local tax, immigration, banking, or accounting professionals.
Country guides
Start with the country-specific guide, then compare banking, residence, tax, and Canadian exit-risk tradeoffs.
Review the Canadian exit checklist and destination-specific planning questions before relying on a non-resident position.
Read GuideReview the Canadian exit checklist and destination-specific planning questions before relying on a non-resident position.
Read GuideReview the Canadian exit checklist and destination-specific planning questions before relying on a non-resident position.
Read GuideReview the Canadian exit checklist and destination-specific planning questions before relying on a non-resident position.
Read GuideReview the Canadian exit checklist and destination-specific planning questions before relying on a non-resident position.
Read GuideReview the Canadian exit checklist and destination-specific planning questions before relying on a non-resident position.
Read GuideInternational residency and banking choices can create tax, immigration, reporting, currency, compliance, and banking-risk issues. Country-specific advice should be confirmed by qualified professionals in the relevant jurisdiction.
The Canadian side should still be reviewed against CRA’s residency guidance before you assume that moving or opening foreign accounts ends Canadian tax residency.
No. The right jurisdiction depends on personal facts, immigration eligibility, banking needs, tax profile, family situation, business operations, lifestyle, and risk tolerance.
CanadianExit can help shortlist options and coordinate introductions. Country-specific advice should come from qualified local professionals in the relevant jurisdiction.
Yes. Jurisdiction shortlisting is usually scoped inside the Private Client Global Exit Strategy after the Canadian exit facts are reviewed.