Docs · Reviewed 2026-07-10

Reviewing your travel-day record in Flags Tax Residency

How Flags Tax Residency uses photo metadata and manual confirmation for an early-warning travel-day record, and what still needs independent review.

Flags: Tax Residency is designed to help you review travel days before a threshold becomes a surprise. It can use photo metadata and manual confirmation to build a private chronology, but the chronology is not a tax-residency determination and should be checked against your own evidence.

Start with a record you can check

Review dates and jurisdictions before treating them as part of a tax-year count. Add missing stays by hand and keep supporting documents outside the app when a professional may need to understand the timeline. A tracker is strongest when it makes gaps and near-threshold periods visible early.

Use an early warning, not a legal verdict

Tax residence can depend on more than days. Different jurisdictions have their own periods, ties, exceptions and treaty rules. The app's role is to help preserve the travel-day facts and flag a jurisdiction for review, not to tell you where you are resident for tax.

Keep sensitive history private

The product listing describes photo metadata and manual confirmation without an account, cloud or GPS tracking. That privacy model does not remove the need to retain independent evidence or obtain advice where the result could affect a filing or move.

Read how to track tax-residency days for the practical recordkeeping approach.

Sources
Tax Residency

Flags is an early-warning day tracker, not tax, legal or financial advice. It does not determine treaty positions or every jurisdiction-specific exception.

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