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And it is something I argued here a lot as well. However if your lawyer says £40 a week I sufficient, I will be tempted to respectfully disagree with him or her, as that is in effect work that is marginal and ancillary. It is not meaningful work.
I think if you can provide as much information as possible it'll look better. Payslips should be enough though. My application was a little different though.
You can provide bank statements too. It’s better to have clients IN the country you’re living in of course but maybe you can make the total up with your online job and your other job.Eli123 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 11:32 pmThank you. I do have 2 payslips but it is less than £100 so will have to do more hours or find something else.
I also do a online job but they don’t provide payslips and I get paid to my bank so I guess this cannot be accepted for the application.
Will do my best. Hope I will be lucky before the brexit deadline
When you say you have two payslips, does that mean you only worked for two months?Eli123 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 11:32 pmThank you. I do have 2 payslips but it is less than £100 so will have to do more hours or find something else.
I also do a online job but they don’t provide payslips and I get paid to my bank so I guess this cannot be accepted for the application.
Will do my best. Hope I will be lucky before the brexit deadline
Thank you for the information. The online job is that they hire freelancers so it’s not a french company and I sometimes earn £100 or more which changes. I did let UK HM revenues know about the online job. The company only provide invoices so it is not payslips so the solicitor said that wont be acceptable.ALKB wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2019 2:29 pmWhen you say you have two payslips, does that mean you only worked for two months?Eli123 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 11:32 pmThank you. I do have 2 payslips but it is less than £100 so will have to do more hours or find something else.
I also do a online job but they don’t provide payslips and I get paid to my bank so I guess this cannot be accepted for the application.
Will do my best. Hope I will be lucky before the brexit deadline
If the online job is for a French company, are you regarded as self-employed for the purposes of this job?
If so, have you registered this with the relevant authorities in France?
For an EU worker in the UK, a guideline of £166/week over a time span of three months or more is given for the work to be considered as 'genuine and effective', I guess that similar would also apply to a Surinder Singh application but I am happy to be corrected there.
I used to also see guidelines of 16 hours per week minimum, but can't find it anywhere. In any case, every case is judged on its own merit, so it's up to you to explain how working two hours per week is a genuine and effective job.
How long have you been in France? If you have a payslip for June you are probably already tax resident in France.Eli123 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2019 10:39 pmThank you for the information. The online job is that they hire freelancers so it’s not a french company and I sometimes earn £100 or more which changes. I did let UK HM revenues know about the online job. The company only provide invoices so it is not payslips so the solicitor said that wont be acceptable.ALKB wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2019 2:29 pmWhen you say you have two payslips, does that mean you only worked for two months?Eli123 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 11:32 pmThank you. I do have 2 payslips but it is less than £100 so will have to do more hours or find something else.
I also do a online job but they don’t provide payslips and I get paid to my bank so I guess this cannot be accepted for the application.
Will do my best. Hope I will be lucky before the brexit deadline
If the online job is for a French company, are you regarded as self-employed for the purposes of this job?
If so, have you registered this with the relevant authorities in France?
For an EU worker in the UK, a guideline of £166/week over a time span of three months or more is given for the work to be considered as 'genuine and effective', I guess that similar would also apply to a Surinder Singh application but I am happy to be corrected there.
I used to also see guidelines of 16 hours per week minimum, but can't find it anywhere. In any case, every case is judged on its own merit, so it's up to you to explain how working two hours per week is a genuine and effective job.
The teaching job I do in France; I wished I had more students as I love doing this job however because I only have two students the total is not more than €100 weekly.
I have a payslip for the month of June and October and will receive November end of the month. They provided a contract for myself as well. So my insurance number is written on it. I work for that agency so they provide you with students to teach privately at their address. As you said the money that I am earning is not genuine. Hourly rate is €16:15 but each student requires 1 hour lesson and the students that are available are very far located.
I am so worried about the brexit deadline, it would be hard to find a extra job now I couldn't find a proper full time job because most places require full french but I speak a little. However my husband earns very well and has payslips.
I went to french language school before for few weeks.
I have been in France for 3 years so been married for 3 years so I was living in the UK for the past 18 years therefore I have studied and grew up in the UK.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 5:16 amHow long have you been in France? If you have a payslip for June you are probably already tax resident in France.Eli123 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2019 10:39 pmThank you for the information. The online job is that they hire freelancers so it’s not a french company and I sometimes earn £100 or more which changes. I did let UK HM revenues know about the online job. The company only provide invoices so it is not payslips so the solicitor said that wont be acceptable.ALKB wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2019 2:29 pmWhen you say you have two payslips, does that mean you only worked for two months?Eli123 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 11:32 pmThank you. I do have 2 payslips but it is less than £100 so will have to do more hours or find something else.
I also do a online job but they don’t provide payslips and I get paid to my bank so I guess this cannot be accepted for the application.
Will do my best. Hope I will be lucky before the brexit deadline
If the online job is for a French company, are you regarded as self-employed for the purposes of this job?
If so, have you registered this with the relevant authorities in France?
For an EU worker in the UK, a guideline of £166/week over a time span of three months or more is given for the work to be considered as 'genuine and effective', I guess that similar would also apply to a Surinder Singh application but I am happy to be corrected there.
I used to also see guidelines of 16 hours per week minimum, but can't find it anywhere. In any case, every case is judged on its own merit, so it's up to you to explain how working two hours per week is a genuine and effective job.
The teaching job I do in France; I wished I had more students as I love doing this job however because I only have two students the total is not more than €100 weekly.
I have a payslip for the month of June and October and will receive November end of the month. They provided a contract for myself as well. So my insurance number is written on it. I work for that agency so they provide you with students to teach privately at their address. As you said the money that I am earning is not genuine. Hourly rate is €16:15 but each student requires 1 hour lesson and the students that are available are very far located.
I am so worried about the brexit deadline, it would be hard to find a extra job now I couldn't find a proper full time job because most places require full french but I speak a little. However my husband earns very well and has payslips.
I went to french language school before for few weeks.
It's generally not where you are paid but where you are while doing the work that you have to pay taxes etc., so I am fairly certain that you should have registered in France as a freelancer of self-employed or their equivalent.
I didn't say the money you earn is not genuine. 'Genuine and effective' is what the EU uses to describe a job that makes an EU person in another EU country that they do not hold citizenship of a 'qualified person' in terms of freedom of movement as a worker.
Have you been working in this UK-based online job for the entire three years?Eli123 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 8:39 amI have been in France for 3 years so been married for 3 years so I was living in the UK for the past 18 years therefore I have studied and grew up in the UK.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 5:16 am
How long have you been in France? If you have a payslip for June you are probably already tax resident in France.
It's generally not where you are paid but where you are while doing the work that you have to pay taxes etc., so I am fairly certain that you should have registered in France as a freelancer of self-employed or their equivalent.
I didn't say the money you earn is not genuine. 'Genuine and effective' is what the EU uses to describe a job that makes an EU person in another EU country that they do not hold citizenship of a 'qualified person' in terms of freedom of movement as a worker.
I did inform the tax company about the teaching Job that I started in June, but will contact them again. However in regards to the Freelancer job (online job) I did not inform about that but will inform, only UK tax company knows about it.
The online job is not based in the UK, it’s based in america and have been working for the online job for about a year. It’s called Upwork and it provides an online workplace, where freelancers provide online, virtual services to companies across the globe.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 9:06 pmHave you been working in this UK-based online job for the entire three years?Eli123 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 8:39 amI have been in France for 3 years so been married for 3 years so I was living in the UK for the past 18 years therefore I have studied and grew up in the UK.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 5:16 am
How long have you been in France? If you have a payslip for June you are probably already tax resident in France.
It's generally not where you are paid but where you are while doing the work that you have to pay taxes etc., so I am fairly certain that you should have registered in France as a freelancer of self-employed or their equivalent.
I didn't say the money you earn is not genuine. 'Genuine and effective' is what the EU uses to describe a job that makes an EU person in another EU country that they do not hold citizenship of a 'qualified person' in terms of freedom of movement as a worker.
I did inform the tax company about the teaching Job that I started in June, but will contact them again. However in regards to the Freelancer job (online job) I did not inform about that but will inform, only UK tax company knows about it.
What tax company? Do you mean a tax advisor?
Freedom of movement is designed so you, the EU national, is not hampered in pursuing career/employment opportunities outside their home country. If you have been tele-commuting to the UK the entire time and only picked up an obviously marginal job in France when planning to use the Surinder Singh route back to the UK while simultaneously being probably in breach of French tax law (plus UK authorities have you on the system as working in the UK)...
I think I'll leave this to somebody more knowledgeable to untangle.
So that American company pays you your earnings before tax and then you pay tax and such to which authority/country?Eli123 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 12:41 amThe online job is not based in the UK, it’s based in america and have been working for the online job for about a year. It’s called Upwork and it provides an online workplace, where freelancers provide online, virtual services to companies across the globe.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 9:06 pmHave you been working in this UK-based online job for the entire three years?Eli123 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 8:39 amI have been in France for 3 years so been married for 3 years so I was living in the UK for the past 18 years therefore I have studied and grew up in the UK.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 5:16 am
How long have you been in France? If you have a payslip for June you are probably already tax resident in France.
It's generally not where you are paid but where you are while doing the work that you have to pay taxes etc., so I am fairly certain that you should have registered in France as a freelancer of self-employed or their equivalent.
I didn't say the money you earn is not genuine. 'Genuine and effective' is what the EU uses to describe a job that makes an EU person in another EU country that they do not hold citizenship of a 'qualified person' in terms of freedom of movement as a worker.
I did inform the tax company about the teaching Job that I started in June, but will contact them again. However in regards to the Freelancer job (online job) I did not inform about that but will inform, only UK tax company knows about it.
What tax company? Do you mean a tax advisor?
Freedom of movement is designed so you, the EU national, is not hampered in pursuing career/employment opportunities outside their home country. If you have been tele-commuting to the UK the entire time and only picked up an obviously marginal job in France when planning to use the Surinder Singh route back to the UK while simultaneously being probably in breach of French tax law (plus UK authorities have you on the system as working in the UK)...
I think I'll leave this to somebody more knowledgeable to untangle.
So it explains that I am a independent contractor performing services as a freelancer for third party client companies through Upwork. Upwork provides an online workplace, where companies hire, manage, and pay freelancers through their web-based. The third party company is French as I applied through french job website.
UK knows that I am working in France by doing the teaching job which I did inform them that I teach 2 hours per week in Paris.
Also I did not start work because of the surinder singh route, I have been in France for 3 years and we have decided few weeks ago that we want to move back to the UK. I started the teaching job in June so I have registered myself for that company 2 years ago but the locations were far so I had to wait. So my husband supported me financially and I was a housewife during that period and I registered at the job centre before and went language school for few weeks last year.
I have applied for so many jobs for the past 3 years in france. For the teaching job I have a contract and payslips.
Basically each week you get deducted for example there is VAT for Service Fee so it is taken out of the weekly earning. Upwork deducts this which is based in America and I am a freelancer for the third party client through Upwork.ALKB wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 2:22 pmSo that American company pays you your earnings before tax and then you pay tax and such to which authority/country?Eli123 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 12:41 amThe online job is not based in the UK, it’s based in america and have been working for the online job for about a year. It’s called Upwork and it provides an online workplace, where freelancers provide online, virtual services to companies across the globe.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 9:06 pmHave you been working in this UK-based online job for the entire three years?Eli123 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 8:39 am
I have been in France for 3 years so been married for 3 years so I was living in the UK for the past 18 years therefore I have studied and grew up in the UK.
I did inform the tax company about the teaching Job that I started in June, but will contact them again. However in regards to the Freelancer job (online job) I did not inform about that but will inform, only UK tax company knows about it.
What tax company? Do you mean a tax advisor?
Freedom of movement is designed so you, the EU national, is not hampered in pursuing career/employment opportunities outside their home country. If you have been tele-commuting to the UK the entire time and only picked up an obviously marginal job in France when planning to use the Surinder Singh route back to the UK while simultaneously being probably in breach of French tax law (plus UK authorities have you on the system as working in the UK)...
I think I'll leave this to somebody more knowledgeable to untangle.
So it explains that I am a independent contractor performing services as a freelancer for third party client companies through Upwork. Upwork provides an online workplace, where companies hire, manage, and pay freelancers through their web-based. The third party company is French as I applied through french job website.
UK knows that I am working in France by doing the teaching job which I did inform them that I teach 2 hours per week in Paris.
Also I did not start work because of the surinder singh route, I have been in France for 3 years and we have decided few weeks ago that we want to move back to the UK. I started the teaching job in June so I have registered myself for that company 2 years ago but the locations were far so I had to wait. So my husband supported me financially and I was a housewife during that period and I registered at the job centre before and went language school for few weeks last year.
I have applied for so many jobs for the past 3 years in france. For the teaching job I have a contract and payslips.
HMRC in the UK or the French tax authority/URSSAF?
I am fairly certain, that you should have registered as auto-entrepreneur or mini-entrepreneur or whatever they call it nowadays, paying taxes and cotisations into the French system where applicable.
Being a housewife doesn't qualify for Surinder Singh, unfortunately. It doesn't even qualify for free movement, unless you are 'self-sufficient'. Additional private health insurance may or may not be required for this in France.
And did you seek tax advice in France?Eli123 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 6:13 pmBasically each week you get deducted for example there is VAT for Service Fee so it is taken out of the weekly earning. Upwork deducts this which is based in America and I am a freelancer for the third party client through Upwork.ALKB wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 2:22 pmSo that American company pays you your earnings before tax and then you pay tax and such to which authority/country?Eli123 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 12:41 amThe online job is not based in the UK, it’s based in america and have been working for the online job for about a year. It’s called Upwork and it provides an online workplace, where freelancers provide online, virtual services to companies across the globe.ALKB wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 9:06 pm
Have you been working in this UK-based online job for the entire three years?
What tax company? Do you mean a tax advisor?
Freedom of movement is designed so you, the EU national, is not hampered in pursuing career/employment opportunities outside their home country. If you have been tele-commuting to the UK the entire time and only picked up an obviously marginal job in France when planning to use the Surinder Singh route back to the UK while simultaneously being probably in breach of French tax law (plus UK authorities have you on the system as working in the UK)...
I think I'll leave this to somebody more knowledgeable to untangle.
So it explains that I am a independent contractor performing services as a freelancer for third party client companies through Upwork. Upwork provides an online workplace, where companies hire, manage, and pay freelancers through their web-based. The third party company is French as I applied through french job website.
UK knows that I am working in France by doing the teaching job which I did inform them that I teach 2 hours per week in Paris.
Also I did not start work because of the surinder singh route, I have been in France for 3 years and we have decided few weeks ago that we want to move back to the UK. I started the teaching job in June so I have registered myself for that company 2 years ago but the locations were far so I had to wait. So my husband supported me financially and I was a housewife during that period and I registered at the job centre before and went language school for few weeks last year.
I have applied for so many jobs for the past 3 years in france. For the teaching job I have a contract and payslips.
HMRC in the UK or the French tax authority/URSSAF?
I am fairly certain, that you should have registered as auto-entrepreneur or mini-entrepreneur or whatever they call it nowadays, paying taxes and cotisations into the French system where applicable.
Being a housewife doesn't qualify for Surinder Singh, unfortunately. It doesn't even qualify for free movement, unless you are 'self-sufficient'. Additional private health insurance may or may not be required for this in France.
Upwork provides so many jobs but its not their jobs its third parties companies and the third party work with Upwork. (Hope this makes sense ) so you cannot pay tax to france with this job afraid. I wish I could but this company has stated that “ we strongly encouraged you to seek tax advice based on your particular circumstances from an independent tax advisor” that is what they have mentioned.
However as I have stated before for the teaching job I work once a week in Paris and the earning is not more than €100, they provide payslips and contract but obviously the earning is not enough.
I have contacted EU settlement department they have advised that I may be eligible to apply as they do not look for higher earnings so they will be looking into it and will contact me back.
Thank you for the information and I have emailed the tax company yesterday as they are busy over the phone. So will be seeking help.ALKB wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 6:20 pmAnd did you seek tax advice in France?Eli123 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 6:13 pmBasically each week you get deducted for example there is VAT for Service Fee so it is taken out of the weekly earning. Upwork deducts this which is based in America and I am a freelancer for the third party client through Upwork.ALKB wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 2:22 pmSo that American company pays you your earnings before tax and then you pay tax and such to which authority/country?Eli123 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 12:41 am
The online job is not based in the UK, it’s based in america and have been working for the online job for about a year. It’s called Upwork and it provides an online workplace, where freelancers provide online, virtual services to companies across the globe.
So it explains that I am a independent contractor performing services as a freelancer for third party client companies through Upwork. Upwork provides an online workplace, where companies hire, manage, and pay freelancers through their web-based. The third party company is French as I applied through french job website.
UK knows that I am working in France by doing the teaching job which I did inform them that I teach 2 hours per week in Paris.
Also I did not start work because of the surinder singh route, I have been in France for 3 years and we have decided few weeks ago that we want to move back to the UK. I started the teaching job in June so I have registered myself for that company 2 years ago but the locations were far so I had to wait. So my husband supported me financially and I was a housewife during that period and I registered at the job centre before and went language school for few weeks last year.
I have applied for so many jobs for the past 3 years in france. For the teaching job I have a contract and payslips.
HMRC in the UK or the French tax authority/URSSAF?
I am fairly certain, that you should have registered as auto-entrepreneur or mini-entrepreneur or whatever they call it nowadays, paying taxes and cotisations into the French system where applicable.
Being a housewife doesn't qualify for Surinder Singh, unfortunately. It doesn't even qualify for free movement, unless you are 'self-sufficient'. Additional private health insurance may or may not be required for this in France.
Upwork provides so many jobs but its not their jobs its third parties companies and the third party work with Upwork. (Hope this makes sense ) so you cannot pay tax to france with this job afraid. I wish I could but this company has stated that “ we strongly encouraged you to seek tax advice based on your particular circumstances from an independent tax advisor” that is what they have mentioned.
However as I have stated before for the teaching job I work once a week in Paris and the earning is not more than €100, they provide payslips and contract but obviously the earning is not enough.
I have contacted EU settlement department they have advised that I may be eligible to apply as they do not look for higher earnings so they will be looking into it and will contact me back.
Of course an American company will not pay tax for you in France. Since you are resident in France, you have to register as a freelancer/self employed in France and the French tax authority will be sure to tell you if anything needs paying. By you. Not the American company.
VAT has nothing to do with income tax.
I wish you good luck with your application.