My mum. Passed. Away in France in 2221. In ballades. Haute. Viennese nobody told as I was I’ll. I need. To know. Where. She. Is god. Bless. Please help me. ??????? I’m devastated.
I retired early and am hoping to move to France when I'm 64. My understanding was that I would be taxed at 23 percent on my whole pension to cover income tax and social charges including healthcare - thus leaving me approx £2000 worse off per year than if it was just income tax - which I think works out roughly equivalent on my modest income. Does the continuation of the S1 when I hit 66 mean that I will then not be taxed so heavily in France ? I'm interested to know because a mutuelle isn't actually "inexpensive", but maybe £1,000 a year and if my good health continues, I would be hesitant to buy one. Though of course I will be a bit more relaxed at that point due to being in receipt of my state pension ... EDIT :- apparently I will be exempt from social charges on my pension once I get my S1. I'm pleasantly surprised I will get my S1 even though I will be moving to France post Brexit. www.blevinsfranks.com/french-social-charges/#:~:text=Here's%20what%20you%20need%20to,to%20UK%20nationals%20post%2DBrexit. So the lion's share of French taxation is Social charges so I will be better off at 66 than I would have been in the UK salaryaftertax.com/fr/salary-calculator
My mum. Passed. Away in France in 2221. In ballades. Haute. Viennese nobody told as I was I’ll. I need. To know. Where. She. Is god. Bless. Please help me. ??????? I’m devastated.
I retired early and am hoping to move to France when I'm 64.
My understanding was that I would be taxed at 23 percent on my whole pension to cover income tax and social charges including healthcare - thus leaving me approx £2000 worse off per year than if it was just income tax - which I think works out roughly equivalent on my modest income.
Does the continuation of the S1 when I hit 66 mean that I will then not be taxed so heavily in France ?
I'm interested to know because a mutuelle isn't actually "inexpensive", but maybe £1,000 a year and if my good health continues, I would be hesitant to buy one.
Though of course I will be a bit more relaxed at that point due to being in receipt of my state pension ...
EDIT :- apparently I will be exempt from social charges on my pension once I get my S1.
I'm pleasantly surprised I will get my S1 even though I will be moving to France post Brexit.
www.blevinsfranks.com/french-social-charges/#:~:text=Here's%20what%20you%20need%20to,to%20UK%20nationals%20post%2DBrexit.
So the lion's share of French taxation is Social charges so I will be better off at 66 than I would have been in the UK
salaryaftertax.com/fr/salary-calculator