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Can anyone help? My husband and i live with our daughter in Spain- we have been here for over 2 years. We have a business partnership in the UK and are both self employed with our only income being from the UK. We travel to and from UK regularly to work but also work alot from home.
We are currently paying income tax and NI in the UK because that was what we were advised but now have been told that we ought to be paying social security in Spain. We are happy to do this but it seems that we each would be paying 200 or more every month because the spanish system is expensive for self employed people. We have worked out that it is cheaper to pay for private healthcare insurance. What we want to know is; 1. Would we both have to pay social security? 2. If we opted to go private, can we still pay into the UK pension scheme? Any advice appreciated - many thanks |
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Hi there
thanks for making the time to reply. I am now even more confused. The UK tax office in clear in all of their literature that as i am earning in the UK, i pay tax there and i have also been advised directly by them. I wonder if I have missed something - is there a rule that changes after the fisrt two years? many thanks Alicia |
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In any event, you need to find out the Spanish take on this recent change in the UK rules. Cheers, Bev |
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Spain treats anyone who has been here normally for more than 183 days as a fiscal tax resident. Residency and tax residency are slightly different therefore. I realise there are residency rules in the UK, but at the end of the day you dont live there, you live in Spain. You will never pay tax twice by the way because of the reciprocal arrangement |
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We did the same - we moved here but my husband continued paying as self employed in the UK for the first 2 years and then changed to the Spanish autonomo. He pays around 240 euros per month for the whole family and we all have social security cards to carry.
We were advised that he could choose whether to continue paying into the UK system or change to the Spanish system. We decided to choose Spain as this is home now and we're settled here so it just made more sense. The only reason he didn't switch immediately was incase he couldn't get work here and needed to work back in the UK. At the time (2004) the Inland Rev. were changing the rules for the self-employed, in the building trade, and he didn't want to give up his card, incase it became difficult to get back, if things didn't work out here. Maya |
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Yes you can of course voluntarily continue your payments in the UK which go towards your pension years. But as a Spanish resident you would no longer have been able legally to access thr National Health Sytem in the UK any more, so I'm afraid you were ill advised there. The two years you paid will go towards your pension years though, and for some I think the number of years for a full UK pension is 30 years now. |
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I have this in writing in an email from the Dept of Health. It would also seem that you can still legally access the NHS if you are still paying compulsary Class 1 or Class 2 NICS and all you would need is proof of your employment although I have yet to get this confirmed in writing but anyhow if this was the case you could get an E106. |
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.There seems to be a bit of confusion here ....... An E106 is soley a "certificate of entitlement to sickness and maternity insurance benefits in kind for persons residing in a country other than the competent country" I.E, it is issued in the UK soley for health care in another country. Its not issued in one country for cover in that same country. Its also a temporary cover form. It will only cover you for up to 2 years in the country you have moved to. On the forum the UK authorities complete your details, and when you get to Spain you go to the local Dept of Seguridad and they endorse your forms and send a copy back to the UK. I researched it quite thoroughly as well when we moved here and had numerous conversations with DWP as didi many people I know. You need to speak to the Department of Works and Pensions in Newcastle ... I think you might get a different answer, because in all the hundreds of times this has been discussed on various forums that I've seen over the last many years, no one has ever managed to get legal free NHS treatment in the UK whilst they are a resident in Spain. In point of fact, if you ever go back you have a hell of a job convincing them they you are definately going to be a UK resident, as they think you are just popping back for treatment ![]() Now ....... when you get your E106 registered in Spain and get a temporary SIP card you can then get an EHIC card that will cover you in the UK for emergencies etc when you are on holiday there. I'd be very interested to see the circumstances and details on the email you got, because it flies in the face of every bit of advice given by the UK authorities so far ![]() |
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