Swindon On Tour
Striker
Agree.I'm out as soon as I can. I'm 50 next year. 1 or 2 years left I reckon. Can't imagine anyone not wanting to leave work.
Work to live all the way. Keep posting, keep telling myself end of this year.
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Agree.I'm out as soon as I can. I'm 50 next year. 1 or 2 years left I reckon. Can't imagine anyone not wanting to leave work.
Nice. I’d love to be able to afford that at 50-55
I'm still getting my head around the tax status thing - I was back in uk for 6 months this year so I guess I'm back to baseThanks. I have an Italian passport myself (and my wife will soon have an Irish one) so we should be OK on that front. And language isn't a problem. It's all in the future but I do want to start working out how things work for getting pension payments there, taxation and suchlike. Healthcare I guess will be OK if we are both EU citizens and resident there.
For instance, I understand that they have set up a favourable taxation regime for immigrants moving to small towns in the south (or in the earthquake zones) - where you pay a flat rate 7% on all income for 10 years. Could be quite lucrative especially if I can draw down heavily on the pension during those 10 years, though it might not be where we want to be of course. I expect I'll need some specialist advice on all that stuff. Otherwise I believe you pay tax on all income and there's no tax free allowance like here, so as a pensioner that would cost more I expect.
Can you be tax resident in the UK (like you suggest) if you live most of the year in Italy?
I should probably avoid derailing the thread on something so specific, but might have broader interest for other wannabe retirees I suppose! I think other countries have favourable regimes to attract retirees too.
I think you can exchange your UK licence for an Italian one without taking a test. At least that's what it says here:I'm still getting my head around the tax status thing - I was back in uk for 6 months this year so I guess I'm back to base
Health shoukd be OK if you have passport & residence- you just need to get a codice fiscal ( tax code ) & apply for a Italian health card
Driving is another grey area - I'm still dodging about in my UK reg car but I will need to bite the bullet on this quite soon I think
I think you can exchange your UK licence for an Italian one without taking a test. At least that's what it says here:You must be logged on to see external links
The UK reg car may be a bigger challenge...supposed to re-register it within 90 days. Might be easier to sell it in the UK and buy one locally.
@HerdnMulhall Is this true? My and the wife are looking to move out in about 6-7 years so any information would be usefulPortugal offer ‘golden’ visas and @HerdnMulhall has posted about his town/village in Spain offering incentives to people to move there iirc
As an EU citizen resident there would you not be eligible for free (NHS equivalent) healthcare? I'm pretty sure that's how it works in Italy.Iirc did post something about temporary visas for digital nomads here in Spain some time ago. Basically to counter depopulation, the flight of the young to the cities, some regions are offering 3 year visas to basically set up businesses in rural communities. I can cite Genagaucil, a very beautiful village, close by, as an example. However generally the route for Brits who are no longer economically active is outside most peoples reach here in Spain specially when you include health insurance..
Portugal has been very welcoming but they have been swamped by applications and I read were scaling back.
The best advice appears to try and get an Irish passport. And if you get one be aware that in some provinces you can get onto the excellent national health service for around as an oap( back then) for roughly 100 euros a month which is cheap for what you pay for private.
I’ve read most of the thread and I understand finances are the key for most people but I’m sitting here overlooking the Caldera on Santorini having island hopped here over the last four weeks from Paros, Naxos and Amorgos. All apart from Santorini were cheap but excellent AirBnBs. Amorgos was £250 for 5 nights for two of us. You can’t get a Travelodge for that. I’d never have had the time to do this had I been working. I was made redundant last year and after much inner turmoil I chose to end my working life at 59.
Best decision ever.
Sorry if I wasn't clear. If you are an EU citizen then they are generally reciprocal arrangements regarding health care. Hence the advantage of obtaining an Irish passport.As an EU citizen resident there would you not be eligible for free (NHS equivalent) healthcare? I'm pretty sure that's how it works in Italy.
Iirc did post something about temporary visas for digital nomads here in Spain some time ago. Basically to counter depopulation, the flight of the young to the cities, some regions are offering 3 year visas to basically set up businesses in rural communities. I can cite Genagaucil, a very beautiful village, close by, as an example. However generally the route for Brits who are no longer economically active is outside most peoples reach here in Spain specially when you include health insurance..
Portugal has been very welcoming but they have been swamped by applications and I read were scaling back.
The best advice appears to try and get an Irish passport. And if you get one be aware that in some provinces you can get onto the excellent national health service for around as an oap( back then) for roughly 100 euros a month which is cheap for what you pay for private.
Sounds class that. Enjoy mate.I’ve read most of the thread and I understand finances are the key for most people but I’m sitting here overlooking the Caldera on Santorini having island hopped here over the last four weeks from Paros, Naxos and Amorgos. All apart from Santorini were cheap but excellent AirBnBs. Amorgos was £250 for 5 nights for two of us. You can’t get a Travelodge for that. I’d never have had the time to do this had I been working. I was made redundant last year and after much inner turmoil I chose to end my working life at 59.
Best decision ever.
It is, thank you and I know I’m very lucky. As well as money it’s time that’s important (as has been said upthread so many times) and when I was unexpectedly given the choice, I chose to stop. There is so much to see and do when you have time on your side as you’re not working so I'm always amazed people think they’ll be bored.Sounds class that. Enjoy mate.![]()
Bit if you read some of the posts on here you’ll see that people that are retired fill their time enjoying life, if you can’t fing anything to do other than settee, tv, pub then surely that’s just you / your lack of imagination?Who said I’m not enjoying it ? I am.
I’d paid into the scheme for 32 years.
When I took retirement the plan was to live in Cyprus where half my family already were living. Long story short, we spent a lot of time out there and woukd have stayed there but our daughter moved back to the uk so we followed.
What’s sad about it ? We choose to do what we do. We could stop it all tomorrow but lying on a settee watching shit on tv and wondering what to do next, like go to the pub, isn’t for us.
Thanks for your concern mate.
100% this.People list things they'd do if retired/weren't a slave to the wage. One of these worker weebils comes along and asks 'then what?' as if to suggest it'd soon become repetitive/boring. Aye, unlike getting up on a morning and going to work, to do the same job, five days a week
The key point is choice. People will be doing things they want to do rather than have to do once they are financially able to retire should they wish.
Fairly obvious but I am sure some numb nuts will continue to struggle with the concept![]()
I’ve read most of the thread and I understand finances are the key for most people but I’m sitting here overlooking the Caldera on Santorini having island hopped here over the last four weeks from Paros, Naxos and Amorgos. All apart from Santorini were cheap but excellent AirBnBs. Amorgos was £250 for 5 nights for two of us. You can’t get a Travelodge for that. I’d never have had the time to do this had I been working. I was made redundant last year and after much inner turmoil I chose to end my working life at 59.
Best decision ever.
It is, thank you and I know I’m very lucky. As well as money it’s time that’s important (as has been said upthread so many times) and when I was unexpectedly given the choice, I chose to stop. There is so much to see and do when you have time on your side as you’re not working so I'm always amazed people think they’ll be bored.