Mothergoose
Registered User
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- 144
Thanks gipimann. My accountant was wrong so. He said I was entitled to make voluntary contributions to my Irish State pension whilst working abroad, as the UK was not a member of the EU. I found this on the Citizens advice website. 'If you are working outside the EU and not subject to Irish or EU social insurance contributions you may also opt to pay voluntary contributions.'
Are you paying Social/National Insurance in the UK? If so, you would be excluded :I have just had a letter from Dept. Social Protection stating that I am not permitted to contribute to my Irish Pension while living in the UK as they say I am covered by social insurance in another EU country, but the UK is no longer a member of the EU, and I was under the impression that I could still contribute to Irish pension from abroad. Am I correct?
Thanks for your reply. Early Riser. I'm still confused though - does the social security agreement in CTA cover just social security benefits e.g. illness benefit, JSA etc, or does it also cover contributions to pensions?
Did you make at least 520 contributions in Ireland? When was your last paid PRSI contribution?I am covered by social insurance in another EU country, but the UK is no longer a member of the EU,
My reading of this is that it also covers contributions:
"When working in the CTA, you pay into only one state’s social security scheme at a time"
Indeed I think it refers to compulsory contributions from for example self-employment income in both jurisdictions.This can't be correct given the numbers here in Ireland making voluntary NI contributions in the UK.
This can't be correct given the numbers here in Ireland making voluntary NI contributions in the UK.
I am not sure you are correct here.But just because the UK is allowing voluntary contributions from people simultaneously paying into social insurance abroad it doesn't necessarily follow that Ireland does - this is not covered by the Common Travel Convention on Social Welfare.
Voluntary Insurance or Optional Continued Insurance
(1) Articles 9 to 11 shall not apply to voluntary insurance or to optional continued insurance.
(2) Subject to paragraph (4), where a person is subject to compulsory insurance in one Party by virtue of the legislation of that Party, they shall not be subject to a voluntary or optional continued insurance scheme in the other Party.
(3) If paragraph (2) does not apply and a person has, for the purpose of entitlement to a benefit, a choice between several voluntary or optional continued insurance schemes, they shall be entitled to pay contributions only under the legislation of one Party according to their choice.
(4) In respect of pensions, a person may join the voluntary or optional continued insurance scheme of a Party, even if they are compulsorily subject to the legislation of the other Party, provided that they have been previously subject to the legislation of the former Party because or as a consequence of an activity as an employed or self-employed person and if such overlapping is explicitly or implicitly allowed under the legislation of the former Party.
I am not sure you are correct here.
Articles 9-11 of the Bilateral Convention (here) basically specify that a person is subject to social security rules in one jurisdiction or the other, depending on a number of criteria.
But Article 12(4) (see below) says that someone may if entitled make voluntary contributions in one jurisdiction in relation to pension if they are resident in the other jurisdiction once the legislation does not prohibit it.
I can see no legislative prohibition that would apply in @Mothergoose 's case, see above.
I'm not going to trawl through the Social Welfare Act but I'd be surprised if suspect Citizens' Information was incorrect on this topic:However, it depends on whether Ireland's legislation allows it:
You can choose to pay voluntary contributions (if you are under 66 and meet the other conditions) if you:
If you are working outside the EU and not subject to Irish or EU social insurance contributions you may also opt to pay voluntary contributions.
- Are no longer covered by compulsory PRSI in Ireland
- Are no longer covered by PRSI on a compulsory or voluntary basis in another EU country
The best for @Mothergoose to submit an application.
I'm not going to trawl through the Social Welfare Act but I'd be surprised if suspect Citizens' Information was incorrect on this topic:
The UK is unambiguously not an EU country anymore.
It seems @Mothergoose already had an application rejected so she should probably consider an appeal using the information on this thread.
Well I went and looked up the Consolidated Social Welfare Act. It only says voluntary contributors must no longer be employed or self employed in the state.Whether this extends to the rules for making voluntary contributions in Ireland while simultaneously working and contributing to Social Security in the UK I don't know.
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