he can opt to pay voluntary Prsi contributions. He doesn't have to, and it will depend on which rules apply in the year he reaches pension age as to whether it's worth it or not.between the age of 16 and 66 and no longer covered by compulsory PRSI by way of insurable employment, self-employment or credited contributions.
Yes...he just took his passport... our new lease on the apartment.... and his letter of employment to the bank and they opened an account straight away for him. It was Ulster Bank but we discovered afterwards that they do not have the facility to do international transfer of funds on their internet banking....lol...so you might want to make sure you have that facility when you choose a bank...Thanks for the feedback.
Ann1 does your husband have a uk bank account?
Hi there
My self and my husband work in NI and live in ROI. (me self employed, him employed)
For employees there is no need to file tax returns or pay extra stamps.
Any National Insurance you pay in NI will count towards your Irish stamps.
There is also no issue in relation to opening a sterling bank account using your Irish address.
Hope this helps
Tomorrow
I know one can't pay Voluntary contributions in two EU countries at the same time, but it is possible to pay compulsory in one and voluntary in another, depending on the qualifying conditions.
Yes...he just took his passport... our new lease on the apartment.... and his letter of employment to the bank and they opened an account straight away for him. It was Ulster Bank but we discovered afterwards that they do not have the facility to do international transfer of funds on their internet banking....lol...so you might want to make sure you have that facility when you choose a bank...
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