6 months in Canada/ 6 months in UK
#1
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Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,324
From: Near Kingston, Ontario











Anyone else on here go back to UK for winters and come back in summer? Which country do you claim residency for? Also if you claim UK does your state pension get indexed or no? Any other thoughts on things I might not have thought of? Thanks in advance
#2
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Joined: Jul 2005
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This was our kind of plan too until Covid came. We are in UK with house in NS, plan was to be in NS say June - Oct and UK rest of the time which is 7 months. I am Scottish, wife is Canadian. Plan was to keep resident in UK. I work in UK and subsidiary company in Canada so would be working for same UK company and its Canadian subsidiary when over in Canada. Things we hadn't worked out, dog, driving licence, would have to take private health care, not sure what flights are going to look like now in terms of availability and cost. We might try it in 2022 and see how it works, sure there are other things we haven't thought of!
#3
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Joined: Jan 2008
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From: Near Kingston, Ontario











This was our kind of plan too until Covid came. We are in UK with house in NS, plan was to be in NS say June - Oct and UK rest of the time which is 7 months. I am Scottish, wife is Canadian. Plan was to keep resident in UK. I work in UK and subsidiary company in Canada so would be working for same UK company and its Canadian subsidiary when over in Canada. Things we hadn't worked out, dog, driving licence, would have to take private health care, not sure what flights are going to look like now in terms of availability and cost. We might try it in 2022 and see how it works, sure there are other things we haven't thought of!
#4
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Joined: May 2010
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From: San Diego, California











Health Care? If resident in Canada and only visiting UK for 5 months or so you, technically, are not eligible for the NHS.
Insurance for property - most insurance companies won't cover for long term absence without some sort of additional policy.
Presume if you have own home then you'd need it to be looked after/checked on while away.
Insurance for property - most insurance companies won't cover for long term absence without some sort of additional policy.
Presume if you have own home then you'd need it to be looked after/checked on while away.
#5
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Joined: Feb 2013
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From: BC, Canada











Taxes ................ which country will you be resident in?
Health .................. if you are out of Canada for a certain length of time, you are not eligible for Pharmacare (or whatever it is called in your province).
Health .................. if you are out of Canada for a certain length of time, you are not eligible for Pharmacare (or whatever it is called in your province).
#6
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Joined: Jul 2007
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If you're visiting England for less than 6 months, you should ensure you're covered for healthcare through personal medical insurance during your visit, even if you're a former UK resident. If you're not ordinarily resident in the UK and you need to pay for NHS hospital treatment, you'll be charged at 150% of the national NHS rate.
#7
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https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-age...cy-status.html
#8
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And if the UK isn't deemed your permanent country of residence, they'll be paying the foreign patient fees of 150% of the treatment cost, instead of getting NHS treatment for free.
#9
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Joined: May 2010
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From: San Diego, California











For what it's worth and from my experience emergency care for accidents or sudden acute illness is basically provided FOC and without question in the UK whereas in Canada they want your credit card details as soon as you enter A&E. I would say be resident for healthcare in Canada and be prepared to wing it if you need sudden health care whilst in the UK.
Visitors/tourists to the UK are eligible for no charge emergency treatment in A&E. If you need hospitalisation , you pay for it.
So. break your wrist, fall off your bike: if you are treated in an A&E only, no charge. If you have a heart attack are hospitalised and, god forbid, end up in ICU, expect to pay thousands for treatment.
Get health insurance.
#10
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For what it's worth and from my experience emergency care for accidents or sudden acute illness is basically provided FOC and without question in the UK whereas in Canada they want your credit card details as soon as you enter A&E. I would say be resident for healthcare in Canada and be prepared to wing it if you need sudden health care whilst in the UK.
https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/h...itish-columbia
#11
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Joined: Jul 2012
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Well I'm glad this thread is here as it prompted me to look up elibility. Found out that we are eligible for NHS services due to my husband's war oension.
https://www.nhs.uk/nhs-services/visi...nhs-treatment/
https://www.nhs.uk/nhs-services/visi...nhs-treatment/
#12
For what it's worth and from my experience emergency care for accidents or sudden acute illness is basically provided FOC and without question in the UK whereas in Canada they want your credit card details as soon as you enter A&E. I would say be resident for healthcare in Canada and be prepared to wing it if you need sudden health care whilst in the UK.
#13
I lived for several years, in Canada, with someone who wasn't eligible for government healthcare (she was here as a tourist). During that time she had a number of inpatient hospital treatments and routinely went to the family doctor. The cost was reasonable, way less than a small animal vet would charge, despite the quality of treatment (she once phoned her stepfather, a doctor in the US, from the hospital and described the tests she was having "no HMO would allow me to do that" he said). I would not bet that paying for healthcare is cheaper in the UK than in Ontario though, if "wing it" means "brazenly lie and cheat" it may be.
#14
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Walk in clinics are pretty affordable, usually in the $100-$200 range in BC depending on clinic, but that just gets you in to see a GP, if you need lab or a referral those are all extra costs.
MRI at one of the private clinics in BC will run $600 upwards depending on type of MRI, CT scans run $500-$1,000 depending if contrast is needed, PET is pushing $2,000.
These are at private diagnostic places though, no idea what these would run in a hospital if not covered.
https://initiomedical.ca/booking-costs/
#15
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Joined: Jul 2007
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For what it's worth and from my experience emergency care for accidents or sudden acute illness is basically provided FOC and without question in the UK whereas in Canada they want your credit card details as soon as you enter A&E. I would say be resident for healthcare in Canada and be prepared to wing it if you need sudden health care whilst in the UK.
Well I'm glad this thread is here as it prompted me to look up elibility. Found out that we are eligible for NHS services due to my husband's war oension.
https://www.nhs.uk/nhs-services/visi...nhs-treatment/
https://www.nhs.uk/nhs-services/visi...nhs-treatment/




