That won't work.Isn't doable with regular coins or investment grade bullion.
Legal Tender coins is probably the best tool for the problem you're trying to solve. It gives you plausible deniability and an excuse to not declare.
Ex with LT:
1. Carry 399x of 1 oz LT gold coins of 25€ face value each.
2. You're carrying ~€700K at the spot price, but only €9975 of cash equivalent at the face value which puts you just under the 10K reporting threshold.
It's a slippery slope. Not every toll bueraucrat will give you a warm nod of agreement.
If you can explain the mission in more detail, I can give more actionable advice to lower your risks. Are you moving gold to EU for arbitrage? Are you moving your own wealth? Washing for clients? Each case is very different.
REGULATION (EU) 2018/1672 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL
of 23 October 2018
on controls on cash entering or leaving the Union and repealing Regulation (EC) No 1889/2005
ANNEX I
Commodities used as highly-liquid stores of value and prepaid cards which are considered cash in accordance
with point (a)(iii) and (iv) of Article 2(1)
1. Commodities used as highly-liquid stores of value:
(a) coins with a gold content of at least 90 %; and
(b) bullion such as bars, nuggets or clumps with a gold content of at least 99,5 %.
Not in countries that are tax free.How so if you exchange in person? Although i really dont like the whole exchange in person thing. Im sure pictures are being taken, records kept etc. Apart from the whole counterfeit, safe way back etc issue.
Well EU prefered or anything that is not 30h of flights...
Im sure pictures are being taken, records kept etc.
Your best bet is to exchange for cash and set up an account in a UAE.
how much do you want to buy in a physical store? and how far are you from say Germany?This is about private asset movement without trails.
Guess selling the BTC for cash on the street is the better way in general.
Exactly. Records are kept for god knows how long on LocalBitcoins. And your KYC is linked to your wallet.
I wouldn't put my own ID nowhere near that fake p2p platform.
Despite a higher markup, even BTC ATMs are a superior choice. If you got patience, visit a few ATMs every day and cash in/out exactly below the KYC verification limit. Then your only concern is the camera/photo trace.
How would he spend from that account with a peace of mind in the EU? And there are CRS conerns...
These concerns are relevant even for simple storage.
Requires advanced residency planning/misleading to make a good ride out of it.
how much do you want to buy in a physical store? and how far are you from say Germany?
Dan I DM you about your access to gold miners ?Not at all.
Cash transactions are normal in Dubai. My business partner bought his car from the dealership for 400K AED which is about 100K USD after selling his BTC in February. Carrying large amounts and transacting in such in the UAE is normal.
To give you an example I have miners that bring gold and diamonds to the UAE from South America and Africa. They declare the items at customs and pay $100 for import certificate. They sell the gold to a refinery who will pay you cash. When you leave the country you declare what you sold against you import certificate and you are free to go.
The cash when you land at the other side is your problem. Most airports in Africa are too busy looking for electronics to charge you import duty.
Yes of course info belowDan I DM you about your access to gold miners ?
Yes many do fly via Dubai to Switzerland for the little extra they can achieve over there.Import of Gold into EU is not as bad as someone can think:
VAT rate for gold with purity 900/1000 and more: 0 %
Customs duties: 0 %
You just have to declare it. And nothing more. If you have a proper documentation about where and for how much you bought it and about actual ownership, it is easy and straightforward process. 2 pages short form in any EU airport.
Or, you can do one thing, which is not legal but many people do it:
You can fly from UAE to Switzerland. Switzerland does not have any legal requirement to report gold when entering a country. Switzerland is not member of EU, but is member of Schengen zone. So the reality is, there are no customs or immigration controls in the most of borders between Switzerland and neighbouring countries. There are just some controls from time to time on a highway border crossing. But there are so many places where you can enter EU from Switzerland without any control...