Explore, connect, thrive in
the expat community

Expat Life: Local Discoveries, Global Connections

American Citizens living in Buenos Aires and maintaining USA brokerages while living in Argentina

Dick

Active member
Has anyone here transitioned their US brokerage account to an official Argentine residential address? I am trying to map out the exact requirements and practical limitations of using a declared foreign address versus maintaining a US one. I was going to use my sister's house but she is too nosy and I don't want her opening my financial statements.

I’ve consistently seen Charles Schwab (specifically their International account) recommended as the most accommodating for expats, but I’d appreciate some clarity on the actual service scope. I understand that purchasing US-domiciled mutual funds is restricted for non-residents across the board, but what other limitations should I expect? Specifically, I am wondering about any restrictions on buying US ETFs or trading options, the potential loss of cash management features like checking accounts or debit cards, and any unexpected compliance hurdles or account minimums you might have faced.

Would love to hear your firsthand experiences. Thanks.
 
Do NOT tell your bank you are living in Argentina. Simple enough. I wouldn't send to my family members either. Most brokerages however allow you to get e-statements but some forms they are required to mail. But you shouldn't have any issues if you put all correspondence to come via email. I use US Global mail since they are based out of Texas (no state income taxes). It might make sense for you to switch to a no state income tax first and establish "residency".


Getting US bank statements delivered while living in Buenos Aires requires a specific type of service. You need to set up a virtual mail box (or mail forwarding service), but because this is for banking, there is a major hurdle you need to navigate first.

Under US "Know Your Customer" (KYC) regulations, financial institutions (like Charles Schwab, Chase, etc.) require a physical Residential address on file. They run addresses through a USPS database. If the database flags your address as a Commercial Mail Receiving Agency (CMRA) which almost all virtual mailboxes are, the bank may reject it as your primary residence, freeze the account, or demand a utility bill.

Most expats solve this by splitting their addresses on the bank's profile:

Residential Address: A trusted family member or friend’s physical house in the US.

Mailing Address: Your Virtual Mailbox (banks usually do not care if your mailing address is a CMRA).

If you are setting up a virtual mailbox to act as your US mailing address, you want one that provides a real street address (not a "PO Box 1234" format), scans the outside of envelopes quickly, lets you click to open/scan the contents as a PDF, and securely shreds the physical copy.

Here are the top three most reliable options for expats:

Traveling Mailbox

  • How it works: They offer real street addresses in dozens of states. When mail arrives, they scan the envelope. You use their app to tell them to open and scan the contents, forward it, or shred it.
  • Why it’s great for expats: Their mobile app is excellent, their pricing is very competitive, and they integrate easily with cloud storage (Evernote, Google Drive) so you can automatically save your scanned bank statements.
PhysicalAddress.com

  • How it works: Similar scanning and forwarding model, but with a major structural difference.
  • Why it’s great for expats: Unlike other services that use third-party franchise stores (like local UPS stores) to process mail, PhysicalAddress owns and operates all of their own mail centers. This means tighter security, faster scanning times, and less risk of the location suddenly shutting down.
US Global Mail

  • How it works: Based out of Houston, this service is specifically tailored for long-term expats and corporate relocations.
  • Why it’s great for expats: They have a very strong reputation for reliability and customer service. They are highly experienced in dealing with the specific pain points of Americans living abroad, including check deposit services if a bank accidentally mails you a physical check instead of depositing it.

When you choose a provider, try to pick a state address that has no state income tax (like Texas, Florida, or South Dakota) if you are also changing your state residency. Once the mailbox is active, go into all your US bank portals and switch every possible setting to 100% Paperless/e-Delivery. The virtual mailbox is mostly there to catch the inevitable physical mail that banks still stubbornly send (like updated debit cards, legal privacy notices, or tax forms).
 
Be very very very careful about putting you live outside of the US. I would follow the advice above by @Finance Prof. Doesn't make sense to tell them and use a VPN for the USA for banking.

My friend had a terrible experience with Meriil Lynch when he moved to Argentina. They almost closed all his IRA accounts once they found out he was not living in the US.

He had to end up transferring his funds out as it was a hassle. He sold his house and they wanted him to send utility bills under his name and address but he didn't have any property and he was living out of a hotel for a few months as his house sold quicker than he thought.
 
Definitely follow their advice. I ran into the same thing. I had no idea some funds require only Americans living in the US. I had no clue. I just get all my banking stuff at my sister's house. I get email statement PDF's. They have never once sent anything to her house. Just check the option for e-statements. I would recommend also doing this for social security. I never told them I moved out and just get everything registered to my sisters house and only use American banks.
 
Definitely follow their advice. I ran into the same thing. I had no idea some funds require only Americans living in the US. I had no clue. I just get all my banking stuff at my sister's house. I get email statement PDF's. They have never once sent anything to her house. Just check the option for e-statements. I would recommend also doing this for social security. I never told them I moved out and just get everything registered to my sisters house and only use American banks.
Thanks or the heads up. I had no idea! I'm trying to move to Argentina now with my family.
 
Back
Top