Giving across a border breaks where two jurisdictions do not recognise each other’s charitable status: the gift loses its tax recognition, stalls, or fails compliance. The House builds the corridor so that it reaches the recipient whole and keeps its tax recognition on both sides.
The House builds the gift’s route across the border: it selects a recognised corridor — an intermediary, an equivalence mechanism or a recognised conduit — so that the gift reaches its purpose and keeps its tax recognition on both sides, rather than losing it at the seam between two jurisdictions.
What you get: a map of the corridor with the points where the gift may stall, across both jurisdictions · a chosen route — an intermediary, equivalence or a recognised conduit · a memo on preserving the gift’s tax recognition on both sides · a KYC pack on the source of funds for the transfer’s compliance
The gift reaches its purpose in the jurisdiction where it sits, and arrives whole — with its tax recognition preserved, with no halt at the border and no compliance questions. The border ceases to be an obstacle to generosity: wherever the purpose lies, the gift has a route that the House holds for you.
The Diagnostic is credited against the mandate fee. A reply within one business day.