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> Working in NL and living in Germany or NL??
yariv3g
post Jun 7 2005, 06:53 PM
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Can anyone tell me what is better for family and finance where should I live if I work at NL ,close to germany?
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ulme
post Jul 12 2005, 05:33 PM
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Well Germany is much cheaper in living and housing. I am working in the north of netherland and live in germany. This is ok if your working place is not too far away from the border. But there are also people working in Amsterdam and live in Germany.
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humberto
post Aug 12 2005, 08:06 PM
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I'm living in Venlo and live across the border in Germany. But I don't think it makes much difference, except my rent is quite cheap.
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chinni
post Dec 15 2005, 02:36 PM
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Hello,
I am a non EU-guy, currently living and working in NL.

1)I have a job offer from a German company which allows me to have a home office in NL. I have a residence permit from NL with a status: " Arbeid vrij toegestaan" (free in the labour market meaning I can work for any employer including a German employer). Does anyone know about the right german authority which can approve my NL work status and allow me to work for a German company but still live in NL. My new company do not know whom to approach for such a permission/approval. In general the arbeitsamt is the right office to get the work permit but as I already have a work permit to work in NL which inturn (with the status "free to labour market") allows me to work for a German employer I think there is no need to get a work permit from Arbeitsamt in Germany. Please advice if there is a special office I should contact.

2)Should I be paying the taxes to the NL government or to the German government? Should my new proposed German Employer pay the tax to German government or to the Dutch government?
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ulme
post Dec 15 2005, 02:50 PM
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Hi, if you have a workpermit in the netherlands then it should be no problem receiving one in germany. In principle your employer should know where to get it. But if you don't know where to go ask at the local Ordnungsamt of the Hometown of your employer they can give you advise.

for your second question: You pay taxes where you are employed. So your german employer should pay the taxes to the german Finanzamt.
Your lucky: german taxes are lower then dutch ones.
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mvn
post Dec 15 2005, 03:40 PM
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As such the NL work permit does not authorize you to work for a German company, it only lets you work freely in the Netherlands. One Eu country does not confer rights to you to work in another EU country unless you are EU citizen, residency bares no significance in confering such rights
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danzindd
post Sep 26 2007, 01:25 PM
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(mvn)
As such the NL work permit does not authorize you to work for a German company, it only lets you work freely in the Netherlands. One Eu country does not confer rights to you to work in another EU country unless you are EU citizen, residency bares no significance in confering such rights


Does this apply to non-EU people as well, i mean working in NL and living in DE ?
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mvn
post Sep 26 2007, 02:15 PM
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(danzindd)
Does this apply to non-EU people as well, i mean working in NL and living in DE ?


What do you mean?
Please state your situation fully.
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