01 — The territorial tax system, honestly explained
Paraguay operates a territorial tax system. The standard regime taxes Paraguay-source income — work performed in Paraguay, services rendered to Paraguayan clients, rent of Paraguayan property, and so on. Foreign-source income falls outside the tax base.
That sentence is the entire substance of the tax case for Paraguay. It is also routinely flattened into "$0 tax!" or "Paraguay = no taxes" — both of which are wrong, and both of which make sophisticated readers stop reading.
What is and isn't Paraguay-source income
The line is mostly intuitive once you slow down. Paraguay-source income includes:
- Salary or fees for work physically performed in Paraguay.
- Services rendered to Paraguayan clients (unless purely from abroad).
- Rent collected on Paraguayan real estate.
- Dividends or interest from Paraguayan companies and Paraguayan instruments.
Foreign-source income includes:
- Consulting and contract work billed to clients abroad.
- Dividends from companies organized outside Paraguay.
- Rent from foreign real estate.
- Capital gains realized abroad.
- Most expat-relevant income for digital nomads and remote workers.
The personal income tax (IRP) — what rate applies, to what
Paraguay's personal income tax is called IRP and tops out at 10%. It applies to Paraguay-source personal income above an annually adjusted non-taxable threshold. For most expats living in Paraguay but earning abroad, IRP doesn't bite — because the income isn't in scope.
"Not taxed" is not the same as "not reportable"
This is where the slogan version of the story falls apart. Paraguay doesn't tax foreign-source income, but your bank — wherever it sits — may still ask where your money came from. That's a separate paper trail. The formal tool for it is a consulta vinculante with DNIT (Paraguay's tax authority): a binding written inquiry that produces a formal answer specific to your situation. Some clients use it to satisfy proof-of-funds requests at foreign banks.
Read more on voluntary declarations →
Does having a RUC change any of this?
A common forum claim says that registering for a RUC (Paraguay's tax ID) "exposes" worldwide income to Paraguayan tax. It does not. A RUC commits you to monthly Marangatu filings — including months with zero activity — but it does not extend Paraguay's tax jurisdiction. The territorial principle still applies.
Read what a RUC actually commits you to →
02 — Paraguay and the U.S. bona fide residence test
This section is for Americans. The IRS lets a U.S. citizen exclude a meaningful slice of foreign earned income from U.S. taxation under the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE). Two paths qualify:
- Physical presence test: 330 full days in any consecutive 12-month period spent outside the U.S.
- Bona fide residence test: tax residency in a foreign country for an entire calendar year, with sufficient ties to that country to demonstrate it's your real home — not just where you happen to be passing through.
The bona fide path is more flexible day-to-day (you can spend more time in the U.S. without losing it) but harder to prove. The IRS looks for genuine ties: a residence, a tax registration, an integrated life. This is where Paraguay's residency program is genuinely useful for the U.S.-tax-aware expat.
What Paraguay residency provides for the bona fide case
- Permanent residency through standard channels (about $1,500–$3,000 in the standard path) or directly through the CIE investor route.
- Cédula de Identidad — Paraguay's national ID, which carries weight in any documentation conversation.
- Verifiable Address — a real residential lease and utility bills in your name, the kind of address evidence the IRS and foreign banks both want to see.
- Tax registration (RUC) — formal status with DNIT and a monthly filing record demonstrating you're plugged into the Paraguayan tax system.
What we don't say
We don't tell you Paraguay residency on its own makes you bona fide. That's a determination the IRS makes on the totality of the facts. What we do say is that Paraguay's residency program — done properly — provides the strongest set of facts available at this price point in the Western Hemisphere.
Read the CIE (residency by investment) guide →
03 — What Paraguay isn't
Honesty cuts both ways. Paraguay isn't:
- A banking jurisdiction. Local banks are conservative and not particularly expat-friendly. Most international clients continue banking abroad.
- A free pass on tax obligations elsewhere. Your home country may still tax you — particularly if you're American (unless FEIE applies) or if you haven't formally exited residency in your previous home.
- A secret. Paraguay's residency program has been on the radar of the international expat community for several years. It's well-known enough that most banks recognize it.
- A 24-hour process. Even at speed, a properly executed Paraguay residency runs 2–4 months end-to-end including document collection. Anyone promising less is selling a different thing.
What it is: an honestly territorial tax jurisdiction, a low-cost permanent-residency path, and a country with enough infrastructure to live in if you want to — with a local team that's been through every step of it themselves and is now on the other side, ready to walk you through.
What to do next. If this is the first you've thought seriously about Paraguay, the Sweet Home Paraguay Planner will tell you exactly what documents you'll need from your specific country and on what timeline. Free, two minutes. If you've decided and you're ready to start, the Sweet Home Paraguay App is where you sign up — and we take it from there.