Results 16 to 24 of 24
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10th February 2015, 10:57 PM #16GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2005
- Location
- Helensburgh
- Posts
- 608
The second attempt at this post, I hope the first one disappeared entirely. I would look at getting a house swap for an extended period of time. Many have returned and many have come back far wiser but poorer and had to start again. Doing a house swap would be the least disruptive way with the opportunity to fully assess whether you make it permanent or not.
CHRIS
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11th February 2015, 07:53 PM #17Member
- Join Date
- Feb 2012
- Location
- Sydney
- Posts
- 19
Hello Steamingbill,
In relation to your OP, there is a small article in today's Sydney Morning Herald, page 8 of money section.
This specifically relates to UK -> Aus transfers, but mention is made of one Simon Harvey, of BDH Sterling "which provides cross-border financial advice" and "is licensed in Australia and the UK".
Might this be a possible initial port of call for financial planning in relation to your proposed move?
I haven't done a search on this outfit, just found the reference in the SMH.
Cheers,
Mark
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11th February 2015, 09:15 PM #18SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Nov 2010
- Location
- Gippsland Victoria
- Posts
- 25
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12th February 2015, 01:18 AM #19
If you're not resident in Australia and running an SMSF then there are tax and compliance implications that need to be considered. I you're not resident then I believe you need to have someone who' resident as designated trustee of the SMSF.
Living in UK off a credit card being paid off in Australia. Might work but this is something the ATO target when monitoring tax dodgers and I'd say the British Tax Office would be doing the same..Whatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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12th February 2015, 01:47 AM #20GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2005
- Location
- Helensburgh
- Posts
- 608
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12th February 2015, 02:55 AM #21Retired
- Join Date
- May 2012
- Location
- Canberra
- Posts
- 122
spin, baby, spin...
From a tools perspective, you'll need to replace your drills, drill bits and router bits as they all spin the other way in the northern hemisphere.
Bit of a bummer having to rebuy them all again.
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12th February 2015, 08:07 AM #22Senior Member
- Join Date
- Sep 2013
- Location
- Sunny side of Derwent River
- Posts
- 28
Think Tassie again, clean air, relatively cheap housing, excellent timbers, everything is close, tools would ship easily to new location, good fishing, great beer, friendly people...
Cheaper to get to than Scotland
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12th February 2015, 09:51 AM #23GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
- Location
- Townsville, Nth Qld
- Posts
- 102
Actually, I prefer NZ South Island, Hokitika on the West Coast, or Queenstown or Dunedin. Great places, magnificent scenery
regards,
Dengy
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12th February 2015, 02:13 PM #24Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Jul 2014
- Location
- Busselton, WA
- Posts
- 3
Nah, I spent five years living west coast and Queenstown, you are right about the scenery, some of the best in the world but the same can't be said about the people, I did not have a good experience and came away with only a few friends which is unusual. It is a better place to just visit once. I live in Gippsland now and love it, far better. Scotland sounds awesome though, stick with the plan!
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