Originally posted by MEMEME69
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If the UK company is audited and then they check your invoices they will expect you to be paying UK tax. If you were not they would want proof of where you were and tax returns of where you paid tax. If you were to work in France and have proof of that but tax yourself in your home country this wouldn't add up, as it wouldn't be legal and they may simply demand UK tax on top.
Probably the legal way to do this is through a UK Ltd company and all taxed in the UK. If the company charges you out to their subsidiaries acting in a similar way to an agency or consultancy, then a specific contract will exist for that work and should be taxed in the country where the work is carried out.
Just to give an example as to when a tax liability does not occur. You are an Electrician working for a construction company in the UK, they send you out to a customer to do some cabling in another country on the project charged to their account in the UK. Then you have no tax liability there.
An example where a tax liability does occur. A foreign company asks for your services as an Electrician for a short period but the UK client company is not carrying out any project, they simply charge an hourly rate to the foreign company. Then you are liable for tax.
The rule is to simplify companies performing installations when completing project to enable them to send employees and sub-contractors without them having to register locally; this rule doesn't apply to agencies or companies acting as an agency for personal services.
Yes it is complicated but probably in your case taxing yourself in the UK is probably the simplest legal way.
There is a member here who specialises in this. I would contact her.
https://www.contractoruk.com/forums/...-at-ipaye.html
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