All right i get it,but that is the complete opposite from what i have been told by speaking over the phone with support in the meanwhile. So if you are a representative of paypal and the people at support are representatives as well, you have an obligation to be on the same page because businesses that are being invoiced through paypal need to know exactly these details so that they can make business decisions. Paypal is not a small shop last time i checked, it is a legal entity with bank status as well as bank obligations in Europe (at least) . Making a business abroad (especially in europe) and opening a paypal abroad to support that business via local banks is not something new and is surely something that every financial institution supports. What i was told in 2 occasions over the phone is that a business account in another country does not REQUIRE paperwork that proves that the owner of the company RESIDES there,meaning he rents or owns an apartment,but that the BUSINESS address stated on said business paypal account is real and local,that the bank account linked is real and proper, and that the id of the owner of the company is real.And apparently that paypal account there is being run locally which apparently it should (forget the remote handling part thats out of the equation for now) . Now if you mean that the address of the owner of the business and the address of the business itself must be in the same country that would mean that half the greek businesses that have relocated to Bulgaria,Malta or Cyprus, AND use paypal to invoice shouldnt have existed in the first place.So is paypal going to verify my home address AND business address and conclude that said paypal account should not have existed in the first place because my business is in Bulgaria and mo house in Greece?If the answer is yes (which i find hard to believe) then i will need a formal writing of this statement because it is against every european rule and regulation ler alone completely incomprehensible. Im not asking for tax advise here, i know that making business abroad requires double taxation through the implementation of intercountry tax treaties and bank information sharing etc etc (unless you have permanently relocated or changed nationality) but paypal doesnt really fit into this scheme by design. I think i will run this again with a support and request a formal and conclusive answer via email because i find it unacceptable (despite the good intentions here) to be misinformed.
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