Tax Regulations Argentina, Czech Republic

Argentina and Czech Republic sign treaty to cut taxes for nomads

Brandon Richards
Brandon Richards ·
Verified · 7 sources· Updated May 12, 2026
Argentina and Czech Republic sign treaty to cut taxes for nomads

The treaty is signed but not active yet

Argentina and the Czech Republic signed their first-ever double taxation treaty on April 14, 2026, setting rules meant to stop the same income or capital from being taxed twice. The agreement still needs domestic ratification in both countries before it can take effect.

The treaty covers Argentina’s income tax and personal assets tax, plus Czech taxes on individuals, companies and immovable property. It also sets reduced withholding rates, including 10% on some dividends, 12% on interest and 3% to 10% on royalties and includes anti-abuse rules tied to OECD and BEPS standards.

Nomads, expats and investors stand to gain

Remote workers and digital nomads with income tied to both countries are the main winners because the deal should make tax residency and cross-border earnings clearer once it enters force. Dual residents, investors and companies making dividend or royalty payments should also see fewer withholding headaches.

Tourists and short-term visitors are unlikely to feel much effect. The treaty is aimed at income and capital taxes, not routine travel stays.

Ratification comes next

Argentina still needs congressional approval and the Czech side has its own legislative steps before the two governments exchange ratification instruments. The treaty would then apply from Jan. 1 of the following calendar year after entry into force.

Taxpayers should keep residency records, contracts and withholding documents ready so they can claim relief once the deal is active. Read our full Argentina, Czech Republic guide for the complete picture and visa updates.

Stay updated on Argentina, Czech Republic

Visa changes, travel alerts, and destination news — delivered when they actually matter.

Related Updates