Moving to France looking for advice
Hello everyone
My daughter and I at present live on the west coast of Scotland with our 2 dogs. We have been thinking about moving to France for quite some time as I am due to retire next year and my daughter has not been enjoying her job for some time. We both work full time at present and also run a self catering flat. If we moved to France we would like somewhere rural with land and gites so we could continue to do self catering. Any suggestions on locations? We were thinking of Charente. Is running a business similar to the uk anyone experienced any problems? Also what was the best way to get your dogs over? Many thanks Catriona |
Re: Moving to France looking for advice
I suggest you have a read through the threads on here re Moving to France.(Use the search button on the beige line above) It is not as easy as it seems! French bureaucracy , health insurance , taxes, etc, etc.
Cannot comment on where to locate, but for dogs - get pet passports and drive them over in your car! I hope it eventually works out , but be prepared for hiccups! |
Re: Moving to France looking for advice
Here's a start for you: http://britishexpats.com/forum/franc...e-faqs-866999/
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Re: Moving to France looking for advice
Originally Posted by Catriona.reid
(Post 12367269)
Hello everyone
My daughter and I at present live on the west coast of Scotland with our 2 dogs. We have been thinking about moving to France for quite some time as I am due to retire next year and my daughter has not been enjoying her job for some time. We both work full time at present and also run a self catering flat. If we moved to France we would like somewhere rural with land and gites so we could continue to do self catering. Any suggestions on locations? We were thinking of Charente. Is running a business similar to the uk anyone experienced any problems? Also what was the best way to get your dogs over? Many thanks Catriona |
Re: Moving to France looking for advice
Originally Posted by InVinoVeritas
(Post 12367329)
Do try renting in France first, many French people dream of living on the west coast of Scotland so you need to understand why that is.
And contrary to the promises made by La République En Marche, for many, during 2018 there will surely be increased expenditure. I note a general increase already planned for a number of charges, namely fuel (diesel), mutual insurance, and postal charges just to name a few. |
Re: Moving to France looking for advice
Welcome to the forum!
Apart from following the above advice, take a look in the on-going thread from another Scottish couple looking for land. Even with a UK State Pension, the annual income from a gîte probably wouldn't be sufficient to keep you both all year round. Your daughter would have to sort out her healthcare insurance. As suggested, read the relevant threads in the FAQs above, bearing in mind that, although renting is highly advised at the beginning, you need to comply with landlords' financial requirements (see Thread "Renting"). Research, research, research is the keyword! :) |
Re: Moving to France looking for advice
Originally Posted by Catriona.reid
(Post 12367269)
Is running a business similar to the uk anyone experienced any problems?
Not trying to put you off, just making the point that moving to a different country also means different laws and a different mindset and culture - which should be obvious but you'd be surprised how often it comes as a shock to people. If that's what you're looking for, go for it! |
Re: Moving to France looking for advice
Have you visited the Charentes area? You must be sure that the area is to your liking. It'll be a massive contrast compared to Bonnie Scotland.
Some friends of ours recently sold an old farm that they had run for years as a little give complex. They had full bookings (Brits mainly) every year and I believe it ticked over quite nicely. Very hard work though and they did struggle with French administration at times. A real adventure though! If you set up a little company for your enterprise, you can make it a "micro-entreprise" (or "auto-entrepreneur" - the same thing). This enables you to simplify the administration and as long as the yearly turnover is less than 70 000 euros a year approx (thank you Macron - it used to be 33 000 a year), you don't have to bother making it a SARL (PLC) and admin is simpler. Mind you, with all this Brexit garbage going on, things could get sticky about medical, "prevoyance"retirement and even the access to set up as a micro enterprise. Who knows what is going to happen. |
Re: Moving to France looking for advice
Originally Posted by Purple Jim
(Post 12383483)
as long as the yearly turnover is less than 70 000 euros a year approx (thank you Macron - it used to be 33 000 a year), you don't have to bother charging VAT and having an accountant, etc.
Sorry to nitpick here :o but in fact, it's been confirmed that the VAT threshold for franchise de base won't change. So if you exceed the current micro ceilings (around 32k for prof lib/services and around 70k for commercial activities) you will in fact need to charge VAT. https://www.federation-auto-entrepre...savoir-en-2018 Though in practice, once you get above the existing thresholds it's probably time to move to a different business structure in any case. A prof lib or service provider with a turnover of 70k would be paying cotisations of around 17,000€ a year... that cannot make sense :eek: I think Macron took his eye off the ball when he thought that one up. |
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