One thing that people would benefit from is to have a discussion what residence means.
It seems there is no dispute so far that if you actually have a home in a given place and live in it (spend nights in it) then you actually reside in it.
Now what happens when you leave for a single 5 month trip overseas?
- If you rent out your home - you don't live there - then you no longer reside and you break continuous residence? What if your mail still comes in and you still work in the US?
- If you leave the home as is then you probably still reside?
Now what happens if you leave for a single 5 month trip and you are a renter. You generally don't want to throw away money and rent an empty apartment unless you don't care about money.
- So you can maintain your address with a relative or a friend. But then you really are not physically present in the relative's place. Even if you pay some utility or sthg - it still is just a cover up. Maybe if you come back and stay at the relative's place for 4 months after you come back - maybe this is ok?
It seems to me that even if you pay taxes, have employment in the US, active bank accounts and numerous other ties than if you do not have a physical home where you will stay then it means you break continuous residence. Even if you rent out your own place - you break continuous residence because the house is not available to you - someone else is living there (It can show that your trip was temporary - but continuous residence and temporary trips have little in common). So even if you go out for 1 day and you are between renting one place and another - then you still break continuous residence.
Is that correct at all?
My reasoning might be too restrictive but this would be common sense if you were to be very strict.
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I am not a lawyer and any advice is probably bogus.
It seems there is no dispute so far that if you actually have a home in a given place and live in it (spend nights in it) then you actually reside in it.
Now what happens when you leave for a single 5 month trip overseas?
- If you rent out your home - you don't live there - then you no longer reside and you break continuous residence? What if your mail still comes in and you still work in the US?
- If you leave the home as is then you probably still reside?
Now what happens if you leave for a single 5 month trip and you are a renter. You generally don't want to throw away money and rent an empty apartment unless you don't care about money.
- So you can maintain your address with a relative or a friend. But then you really are not physically present in the relative's place. Even if you pay some utility or sthg - it still is just a cover up. Maybe if you come back and stay at the relative's place for 4 months after you come back - maybe this is ok?
It seems to me that even if you pay taxes, have employment in the US, active bank accounts and numerous other ties than if you do not have a physical home where you will stay then it means you break continuous residence. Even if you rent out your own place - you break continuous residence because the house is not available to you - someone else is living there (It can show that your trip was temporary - but continuous residence and temporary trips have little in common). So even if you go out for 1 day and you are between renting one place and another - then you still break continuous residence.
Is that correct at all?
My reasoning might be too restrictive but this would be common sense if you were to be very strict.
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I am not a lawyer and any advice is probably bogus.