TL;DR β Key Takeaways
- βThe dashboard is your command center: stat cards, quick actions, and everything linked.
- βSet citizenship first β it activates Schengen tracking and exemptions for EU passport holders.
- βHome country sets the savings ledger baseline; income powers the comparison calculations.
- βThe dashboard updates automatically as you log trips and use the tools.
- βChecking it before booking flights changes how you make decisions.
You just landed in Lisbon. Your Schengen days are somewhere around 70 β maybe 73? β and your Portuguese NIF registration is pending. You've got a folder called "Tax 2026" with nine files in it, none of them organized.
This is the standard nomad tax situation. Not a crisis, but not a system either.
The keepmore.money dashboard is built to be your system. One view that connects your travel history, your tax exposure, your document storage, and the law changes that affect your strategy β so you're not holding it all in your head.
keepmore.money is free to try β set up your dashboard in ten minutes and start actually knowing your tax situation.
Try it free βYour Command Center
When you open the dashboard, you see stat cards first: countries tracked, days logged this year, unread alerts, trips recorded. Each card is a live number, not a static snapshot. Click any of them to drill straight into the relevant tool.
Below the cards is the quick actions panel β one-click access to run a comparison, open your residency log, or pull up the Schengen calculator. The goal is zero hunting. Everything your tax life depends on is one click from here.
The Preferences That Power Everything
The dashboard gets more useful as you fill in your preferences. Here's what each field actually unlocks:
- Gross annual income: powers the Savings Ledger and country tax comparisons
- Currency: converts all figures to your preferred currency across every feature
- Home country: sets your baseline for the Savings Ledger β what you'd pay if you stayed put
- Primary tax home: for US citizens using FEIE or FTC, this is the country you claim
- Citizenship(s): EU passport holders are exempt from the Schengen 90/180 rule β this field activates that exemption
- Dependents: affects bracket calculations for relevant countries
- Alert preferences: choose which countries and alert types appear in your feed
Do them in order. Citizenship first (activates Schengen tracking), then home country (unlocks the savings baseline), then income (powers comparisons). Each one makes the next more useful.
A Dashboard That Updates Without You
You don't manage the dashboard β it manages itself. Log a trip in the Residency Tracker and the day count updates. Watch a country in Alerts and any law changes surface in your feed. Run a comparison and it's cached for next time. The unread badge climbs so you don't have to go looking.
Most nomads check the dashboard before booking a flight. A few use it like a weekly review. Either way works β the point is replacing the spreadsheet with something that actually knows your situation.
Open the dashboard, fill in your preferences, and log your first trip. Takes ten minutes. Then every decision you make for the rest of the year will have better information behind it.
