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Relocation & centre-of-life strategy

Moving your life and business to another country is a sequence, not a leap.

Strategic counsel on shifting your centre of life and business abroad: where, when, in what order, and what it exposes. The firm architects and coordinates the move; local counsel executes in-country.

Shifting a centre of life and business to another country is the kind of decision that goes wrong in the sequence, not the destination. Tax residency, open obligations in Israel, where assets are reachable, and how the move is staged all interact, and a step taken out of order is expensive to undo. The firm works as the Israeli-side lead: it sets the strategy, maps the cross-jurisdiction exposure, and coordinates a vetted network of local counsel and advisers who carry out the in-country steps. It does not perform the foreign transactional work itself.

The work spans
  • The strategic architecture of a move: destination fit, timing, and the order of steps.
  • A cross-jurisdiction exposure map: tax residency, open obligations, assets, and disputes that follow.
  • Sequencing the move so each step does not undermine the next.
  • Coordination of local counsel and advisers in the destination country, with one point of accountability.
  • A read of what stays behind in Israel and has to be managed before, during, and after the move.
  • You are planning to move your life and business abroad and want the sequence designed before you act.
  • You have a destination in mind and need the whole move architected and coordinated, not piecemeal.
  • You are weighing two or more countries and want the strategic and exposure trade-offs read first.
  • You want one Israeli-side lead who has done this before and has the people in place abroad.

The firm treats the move as a project run from the Israeli side, where the lived experience of having guided clients through real relocations sets the sequence. It maps the exposure across both jurisdictions before any step is taken, because the order of operations is where relocations succeed or fail. It coordinates the people on the ground - local counsel, tax advisers, the destination professionals - so the client has one lead rather than a scatter of disconnected advisers. The in-country transactional and filing work is done by local counsel; the firm sets and holds the strategy.

04 · What you get

The sequence designed

The order of steps set so the move succeeds rather than unravels.

The exposure mapped across borders

Tax residency, obligations, assets, and disputes, before you move.

One coordinated lead

The Israeli-side lead, with a vetted local network carrying out the in-country work.

A client deciding to move their centre of life and business abroad instructs the firm to architect the move. The firm sets the sequence, maps the tax-residency and obligation exposure across both countries, coordinates the destination counsel and advisers who execute the in-country steps, and holds the strategy as the single Israeli-side lead through the transition.

Described in abbreviated, anonymised form to preserve client confidentiality.

What is the hardest part of an international relocation, legally?

Usually the sequence and the cross-border exposure, not the destination: tax residency, open obligations in Israel, and where assets are reachable all interact, and a step taken in the wrong order is costly to reverse.

Do you handle the legal work in the destination country?

The firm sets and coordinates the strategy as the Israeli-side lead and works with a vetted network of local counsel who carry out the in-country transactional and filing work, so the client has one point of accountability.

When should I get strategic advice on a move?

Before the first irreversible step, because the value is in designing the sequence and reading the exposure in advance, rather than repairing a move that was made out of order.

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