becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
-
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Sun Apr 14, 2024 3:44 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 41 times
becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
I have been living in Berlin long enough to look at becomming a UK non resident for tax matters. I have checked out the info on the UK Gov. website and it looks really complicated. Has anyone gone down this path? Is it as bad as I fear? Should I get a professional to do it? Just for the first year.
Or just continue to do my online tax return as a resident? Simply because I know how to do it.
Thanks
Colin
Or just continue to do my online tax return as a resident? Simply because I know how to do it.
Thanks
Colin
-
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2024 10:38 am
- Location: North Rhine-Westphalia
- Has thanked: 7 times
- Been thanked: 6 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
"I have been living in Berlin..." sounds like you should have already declared your tax residency status in Germany. If you're not here as a tourist then you have to along with visa/residency permit.
When I moved from the UK it was easy, I contacted HMRC before moving, filled in a form (1 or 2 pages I think) and then on all German documents stated my tax residency as here in Germany.
Generally you can only be tax resident in 1 country... so I'd recommend doing it straight away before the taxman knocks at your door
When I moved from the UK it was easy, I contacted HMRC before moving, filled in a form (1 or 2 pages I think) and then on all German documents stated my tax residency as here in Germany.
Generally you can only be tax resident in 1 country... so I'd recommend doing it straight away before the taxman knocks at your door
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
Why do you consider that you are still tax resident in the UK and that, presumably, you are not tax resident in Germany. As a general matter of tax law, Germany has had the right to tax your worldwide income since you arrived and registered. The UK may also have the right to tax income arising in the UK but who gets the tax in that situation is governed by the double taxation agreement between the UK and Germany.
Have you been submitting German tax returns?
Have you been submitting German tax returns?
-
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Sun Apr 14, 2024 3:44 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 41 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
I do not have German income so I have never done a German tax return
- Franklan
- Posts: 565
- Joined: Sat Feb 17, 2024 3:37 pm
- Location: Munich
- Has thanked: 529 times
- Been thanked: 763 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
You are living in Germany and you are having income.colincostello wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 12:36 pm I do not have German income so I have never done a German tax return
You have to pay taxes on that in Germany, not somewhere else.
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
I think this is wrong. Germany taxes the portion of your income that originates in Germany.
Oder...?
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
Again, isn't the case that you pay income tax to Germany only for the German income?Franklan wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 12:52 pmYou are living in Germany and you are having income.colincostello wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 12:36 pm I do not have German income so I have never done a German tax return
You have to pay taxes on that in Germany, not somewhere else.
I expect our fav tax guru will soon chip in...
- Franklan
- Posts: 565
- Joined: Sat Feb 17, 2024 3:37 pm
- Location: Munich
- Has thanked: 529 times
- Been thanked: 763 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
Nope. For example, if you live in Germany, close to the Dutch border, and you actually work in the Netherlands, commuting by car every day, you have to pay taxes on that income in Germany.
- bethannbitt
- Posts: 129
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2024 7:33 pm
- Location: Konstanz
- Has thanked: 525 times
- Been thanked: 169 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
My neighborhood, directly on the Swiss border, is filled with folks living here on the less expensive side while working for higher wages in . They are tax resident in cuz they reside here.
Likewise, our annual 401K withdrawals, in $ obviously, are taxable here in Germany as part of our worldwide income.
Likewise, our annual 401K withdrawals, in $ obviously, are taxable here in Germany as part of our worldwide income.
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
I see.
How come then my UK rental is taxed by HMRC instead?
Maybe income from work is under different rules than rental income...?
-
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2024 10:38 am
- Location: North Rhine-Westphalia
- Has thanked: 7 times
- Been thanked: 6 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
It's not about where you pay the tax (e.g. to HMRC for UK rental income) it's about having to declare your worldwide income. Double taxation agreements will mean you don't get taxed twice but you still have to declare it in Germany
- PandaMunich
- Posts: 297
- Joined: Sat Feb 17, 2024 3:26 pm
- Location: Munich
- Has thanked: 75 times
- Been thanked: 430 times
- Contact:
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
At the risk of repeating myself:
The double taxation agreement lays down which country has the taxation rights on which income.
You always have to tax your worldwide capital income (interest, dividends, profit from selling stocks/funds/bonds/options and so on, as well as the "fictive profit" called Vorabpauschale on any investment funds that you owned on 31. December, and newly: currency gains in non-current accounts) in your country of residence Germany.
And even if the UK gets the taxation rights on a type of income, e.g. on your UK rental profit through article 6 (1) of the double taxation agreement (DTA) between Germany and the UK: https://www.bundesfinanzministerium.de/ ... onFile&v=1
you still have to additionally declare your UK rental profit in your German tax return, since it is subject to the lesser evil of Progressionsvorbehalt as is laid down in article 23 (1) d) DTA D/UK, i.e. your UK rental profit will increase your German income tax rate on your other income.
For an example with numbers showing the effect of Progressionsvorbehalt, please scroll down to the section "Progressionsvorbehalt" on my website: https://expertise.tax/en/faq-german-tax ... /#resident
You cannot ignore this, because a few years down the line, the Finanzamt will write you a letter asking you why you didn't declare your worldwide capital income or employee income from a non-German employer that you earned from your German home office or your non-EU/EEA rental profit in your German income tax return.
The Finanzamt gets this information from the other country, and while they take a few years to process the data, they will get to you, eventually.
Last edited by PandaMunich on Sat May 11, 2024 8:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Sun Apr 14, 2024 3:44 pm
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 41 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
Wow , having read all the posts above I am very glad that I have deided to use a UK accountant to sort out my tax position. It will cost me 200 quid, but it is money well spent. Just reading the above posts makes my head swim.
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
Only 200quid? Seems very little.colincostello wrote: ↑Mon May 13, 2024 11:17 am Wow , having read all the posts above I am very glad that I have deided to use a UK accountant to sort out my tax position. It will cost me 200 quid, but it is money well spent. Just reading the above posts makes my head swim.
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
Why are you employing a UK accountant to sort out your tax when you are tax resident in Germany? Subject to the double taxation agreement giving taxing rights to the UK, e.g. if you have UK property rental income, all of your income is taxable in Germany, and even items like rental income that are not taxed in Germany, must be included in your German tax return as they are taken into account when setting the rate at which tax is payable.
You need to inform HMRC that you are no longer resident and may need to submit a tax return in the UK if you have income that does remain taxable in the UK but other than that, what will you get for your £200?
You need to inform HMRC that you are no longer resident and may need to submit a tax return in the UK if you have income that does remain taxable in the UK but other than that, what will you get for your £200?
-
- Posts: 118
- Joined: Thu Feb 22, 2024 5:55 pm
- Location: Weserbergland
- Has thanked: 184 times
- Been thanked: 110 times
Re: becoming a UK non resident for tax matters
Colin. Have you told your UK tax advisor that you live in Berlin and have done so for a long time?
If you have been here more than half the year each year, then you are tax resident in Germany. This is not a matter of choice. Unless you are not anmelded and have no right to live here at all, in which case I guess it really doesn't matter what you do.
Your UK rental income is taxed in the UK, no change there. The Germans need to know about it.
Your UK pension income is likely due to be tax paid in Germany (ordinary age-related pension). If you have been paying tax on it in the UK, they refund that tax and you pay German tax instead, not both. There are simple forms for this. Sam-I-am below has done it and survived. There will be others here on Toyporn who will also have done it, maybe with pension income, and will be able to help you through the process.
Please deal with it properly, and don't just bash on with false assumptions - Gary and Panda know their stuff.
If you have been here more than half the year each year, then you are tax resident in Germany. This is not a matter of choice. Unless you are not anmelded and have no right to live here at all, in which case I guess it really doesn't matter what you do.
Your UK rental income is taxed in the UK, no change there. The Germans need to know about it.
Your UK pension income is likely due to be tax paid in Germany (ordinary age-related pension). If you have been paying tax on it in the UK, they refund that tax and you pay German tax instead, not both. There are simple forms for this. Sam-I-am below has done it and survived. There will be others here on Toyporn who will also have done it, maybe with pension income, and will be able to help you through the process.
Please deal with it properly, and don't just bash on with false assumptions - Gary and Panda know their stuff.