Being a free lancer and paying taxes Thread poster: Katja Vuorisalo
|
Hi! Can you give me advice about how it is being a free lancer abroad, do you pay taxes to the country you are living in or to your own home country? How does it go in practice e.g. in France, is there a lot of bureaucratic work before you can start as a free lancer? Thanks in advance! | | | Gerard de Noord France Local time: 00:45 Member (2003) English to Dutch + ...
katerina100 wrote: Hi! Can you give me advice about how it is being a free lancer abroad, do you pay taxes to the country you are living in or to your own home country? How does it go in practice e.g. in France, is there a lot of bureaucratic work before you can start as a free lancer? Thanks in advance! Hi Katerina? I hate to sound like Ralph, but you should at least tell us where you're from and where you plan to stay. Regards, Gerard | | | sarahl (X) Local time: 15:45 English to French + ... I second that! | Aug 9, 2005 |
Let me be Ralph #3: 1. what's your citizenship 2. what's your country of residence? | | | #41698 (LSF) Malaysia Local time: 06:45 Japanese to English + ...
Generally, - You pay tax in the country you live (unless you cross the borders daily in which case you may have to pay taxes in the country in which you are drawing a salary). - You pay tax for income remitted to your home country subject to deductions under Double-Taxation Agreements (countries with exemptions exist). - You have to charge VAT if your annual takings exceed a certain amount and you reside or have main business in VAT-levying countries. Exceptions:... See more Generally, - You pay tax in the country you live (unless you cross the borders daily in which case you may have to pay taxes in the country in which you are drawing a salary). - You pay tax for income remitted to your home country subject to deductions under Double-Taxation Agreements (countries with exemptions exist). - You have to charge VAT if your annual takings exceed a certain amount and you reside or have main business in VAT-levying countries. Exceptions: - US authorities tax their citizens no matter where they live but subject to deductions. - Certain social security payment in home country (such as Japan) may still be payable (possible to have bilateral agreements/recognition). - Countries that exempt foreign-sourced income on a personal level do exist. ▲ Collapse | |
|
|
Samuel Murray Netherlands Local time: 00:45 Member (2006) English to Afrikaans + ... It depends on your two countries, really | Aug 10, 2005 |
katerina100 wrote: Can you give me advice about how it is being a free lancer abroad, do you pay taxes to the country you are living in or to your own home country? It really depends on the country, and whether the two countries' tax systems recognise each other (if they don't, you might end up paying tax twice). Thinking not legally but morally, I'd say that you ought to pay tax in the country where you have resident status. Ethically speaking you should also declare your foreign income to your local tax authority. Other than that, you'd have to be specific. | | | Katja Vuorisalo Finland Local time: 01:45 French to Finnish + ... TOPIC STARTER
sarahl wrote: Let me be Ralph #3: 1. what's your citizenship 2. what's your country of residence? 1. I am Finnish 2. My country of residence at the moment is Finland, but I'm planning of moving e.g. to France, Switzerland...So I was wondering if I pay taxes to the country of whose citizen I am, to the country of residence, or even both?! I'm sure this was discussed lots of times already, but I'm new on this business, so..thanks! | | | Natalia Elo Germany Local time: 00:45 English to Russian + ...
[Edited at 2005-08-10 08:20] | | | Natalia Elo Germany Local time: 00:45 English to Russian + ... Dear Ralph, sorry:) | Aug 10, 2005 |
katerina100 wrote: Hi! Can you give me advice about how it is being a free lancer abroad, do you pay taxes to the country you are living in or to your own home country? How does it go in practice e.g. in France, is there a lot of bureaucratic work before you can start as a free lancer? Thanks in advance! Hi katerina100, A suggestion if I may. What don't you try to search Forums or Knowledge base, for example this article. Natalia | |
|
|
Katja Vuorisalo Finland Local time: 01:45 French to Finnish + ... TOPIC STARTER
Hi, thanks fo reply. 1. I'm Finnish. 2. My country of residence at the moment is Finland, but I'm considering of moving e.g. to France, Switzerland...I was wondering if I have to pay tax to the country whose citizen I am, to the country of residence or even both? Thanks for advice, I will look for previous comments on this subject! | | | sarahl (X) Local time: 15:45 English to French + ... Partial reply | Aug 10, 2005 |
Based on the information you gave us. If you live and work in France, then you have to report your income to the tax authority there. As for your home country, I am not sure, that varies with the country. HTH Sarah | | | Natalia Elo Germany Local time: 00:45 English to Russian + ... Finnish tax authorities | Aug 10, 2005 |
katerina100 wrote: 1. I am Finnish 2. My country of residence at the moment is Finland, but I'm planning of moving e.g. to France, Switzerland...So I was wondering if I pay taxes to the country of whose citizen I am, to the country of residence, or even both?! I'm sure this was discussed lots of times already, but I'm new on this business, so..thanks! One of my citizenships is also Finnish and I moved from Finland to Germany not so long time ago. You will be getting your verokortti for couple of more years and if you get some income from Finland the will take taxes from that. You can however apply for tax exemption if you are planning to live in the new country of residence. There is a special form for that on the webpage of Finnish Tax Administration (Verohallinto) www.vero.fi A lot of things explained there as well. They have Internatonal Department, where I called before moving. Natalia | | | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Being a free lancer and paying taxes Protemos translation business management system | Create your account in minutes, and start working! 3-month trial for agencies, and free for freelancers!
The system lets you keep client/vendor database, with contacts and rates, manage projects and assign jobs to vendors, issue invoices, track payments, store and manage project files, generate business reports on turnover profit per client/manager etc.
More info » |
| Trados Studio 2022 Freelance | The leading translation software used by over 270,000 translators.
Designed with your feedback in mind, Trados Studio 2022 delivers an unrivalled, powerful desktop
and cloud solution, empowering you to work in the most efficient and cost-effective way.
More info » |
|
| | | | X Sign in to your ProZ.com account... | | | | | |