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Do banks actually verify the residency document?

From experience banks yes, EMIs dont.
In addition, banks might send you security tokens to your address, therefore, you will need to be present in the location you indicate during application.
As mentioned above social media checks are also performed to identify your location.
 
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They do not ask for that for now. Just a window pops up and says "We have noticed that you have been using your card a lot in country A recently, please confirm that country B still is your country of residence" and that's it.
So they don't actually give a s**t and it's just to please the regulators. Hopefully it stays that way for the foreseeable future.
 
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Indeed banks generally can't verify your address.

There are special cases though, like Sweden (and I presume the other Nordics) where you don't change your address at Banks, and nobody would ever ask you for a utility bill as a proof of address. Instead you change your address in the government managed population registry, and then the Banks automatically get your new address from this registry.

So you could keep your address in Sweden in this registry, but then you'd be a tax resident in Sweden, and nobody wants that of course!

Or you put an address abroad in this registry, and that's fine, because you can live anywhere in the world and still keep a Swedish bank account.
Well not really the case any more! . . .when you lose your SPAR reg, then your local SWE bank can delete your acoount and revoke your BankID . . i have krux with this now :/ . . .also if u have Swedbank you can not have a account if u live abroad.
 
SCENARIO: You lived in a certain country for a 5+ years, have paid all taxes there.
You left the country and notified the authorities you left.

You still have the ID card of that country and use it to open new bank accounts. You have all the address proof, bank statements with your previous address etc.

Do banks actually verify with the local authorities if you are still a resident?
No they don't. Sometimes it can be a Win sometimes it can lead to double taxation. So do proper research on your own situation.