Making a commitment, but which is best?
#1
Thread Starter
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Joined: Oct 2016
Posts: 1

Hello all,
I’m British with a US green card through marriage, currently completing a PhD. We are trying to decide where best to settle next year but a lot will depend on job opportunities, although that will depend on where most energy is invested in applications. I’m 40, so it’s like starting again in many ways.
If we settle in the UK, then we have the NHS, I will get a state pension. If we settle in the US then we have neither.
If we settle in the US, then is it wise to keep paying UK National Insurance, just in case we decide that living in the UK will bring us more security in the long term?
What do other people do? If settling in the US have you managed to make a clean break and not looked back? Have you given up payment of UK National Insurance contributions and then regretted it?
I really don’t know what to do for the best. But it would be helpful to know what others have chosen to do in this situation.
Thank you.
I’m British with a US green card through marriage, currently completing a PhD. We are trying to decide where best to settle next year but a lot will depend on job opportunities, although that will depend on where most energy is invested in applications. I’m 40, so it’s like starting again in many ways.
If we settle in the UK, then we have the NHS, I will get a state pension. If we settle in the US then we have neither.
If we settle in the US, then is it wise to keep paying UK National Insurance, just in case we decide that living in the UK will bring us more security in the long term?
What do other people do? If settling in the US have you managed to make a clean break and not looked back? Have you given up payment of UK National Insurance contributions and then regretted it?
I really don’t know what to do for the best. But it would be helpful to know what others have chosen to do in this situation.
Thank you.
#2
From my years on the forums (no, I am not and never have been a Brit), I have seen many Brits take US citizenship when eligible so that they can be free to bounce back and forth across the Atlantic without having to deal with immigration. Many also make voluntary contributions.
No one can tell you which is better for you. Only you and your wife can make that decision based on your desires, lifestyle, needs, wants, job opportunities, etc.
I see many here who live and work in the US and one will return to the UK to retire with their US 401K's, private pension plans and social security benefits in addition to what they will get back in the UK. Not a bad way to approach retirement.
No one can tell you which is better for you. Only you and your wife can make that decision based on your desires, lifestyle, needs, wants, job opportunities, etc.
I see many here who live and work in the US and one will return to the UK to retire with their US 401K's, private pension plans and social security benefits in addition to what they will get back in the UK. Not a bad way to approach retirement.
#3
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Joined: May 2010
Posts: 10,147
From: San Diego, California











If you decide to live in the US why would you not get a Government pension here? i.e paying into Social Security; even a private pension.
At age 40 you have, potentially, another 25 years to accumulate a Social Security pension and a private pension.
I moved to the US at age 50 and continued paying voluntary contributions to the UK.
When did you move to the US? Had you been paying NIC in the UK prior to that? A lot depends on what you had accumulated in the UK prior to moving to the US. At age 40 presumably you have paid into either US or UK Social security programs and/or private pension schemes; so from herein you are building on that ?
At age 40 you have, potentially, another 25 years to accumulate a Social Security pension and a private pension.
I moved to the US at age 50 and continued paying voluntary contributions to the UK.
When did you move to the US? Had you been paying NIC in the UK prior to that? A lot depends on what you had accumulated in the UK prior to moving to the US. At age 40 presumably you have paid into either US or UK Social security programs and/or private pension schemes; so from herein you are building on that ?
#4
Banned

Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 47











state pension is pittance is it not?
nhs doesn't do preventative very well vs us healthcare, so I would argue medicaid through social security is better than the NHS. I have relatives who are seniors and the care they get is second to none, especially preventative stuff.
nhs doesn't do preventative very well vs us healthcare, so I would argue medicaid through social security is better than the NHS. I have relatives who are seniors and the care they get is second to none, especially preventative stuff.
#5
state pension is pittance is it not?
nhs doesn't do preventative very well vs us healthcare, so I would argue medicaid through social security is better than the NHS. I have relatives who are seniors and the care they get is second to none, especially preventative stuff.
nhs doesn't do preventative very well vs us healthcare, so I would argue medicaid through social security is better than the NHS. I have relatives who are seniors and the care they get is second to none, especially preventative stuff.
#6
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Joined: Apr 2016
Posts: 233
From: California











Depends on income, I think.
#7
Banned

Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 47











my bad, but social security pays like 80% of it i believe.
my point about the actual care you receive vs the nhs still stands. i'd rather pay for superior care than wait in lines for months or be denied meds/treatment because where i live isn't in the right zip code.
my point about the actual care you receive vs the nhs still stands. i'd rather pay for superior care than wait in lines for months or be denied meds/treatment because where i live isn't in the right zip code.
#8
What in the world does a person's zip code have to do with paying for Medicare? If a person's income is low enough, yes, help is available as another poster mentioned.
#9
If you decide to live in the US why would you not get a Government pension here? i.e paying into Social Security; even a private pension.
At age 40 you have, potentially, another 25 years to accumulate a Social Security pension and a private pension.
I moved to the US at age 50 and continued paying voluntary contributions to the UK.
When did you move to the US? Had you been paying NIC in the UK prior to that? A lot depends on what you had accumulated in the UK prior to moving to the US. At age 40 presumably you have paid into either US or UK Social security programs and/or private pension schemes; so from herein you are building on that ?
At age 40 you have, potentially, another 25 years to accumulate a Social Security pension and a private pension.
I moved to the US at age 50 and continued paying voluntary contributions to the UK.
When did you move to the US? Had you been paying NIC in the UK prior to that? A lot depends on what you had accumulated in the UK prior to moving to the US. At age 40 presumably you have paid into either US or UK Social security programs and/or private pension schemes; so from herein you are building on that ?
#10
Medicare Part A is free, Medicare Part B costs most people $121/month. Then you also have to buy supplemental insurance to cover things that Medicare doesn't and that will either have high deductibles or cost a another couple of hundred a month. The theres the cost of drugs which are very expensive in the US.
#11
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Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 47











was talking about the nhs. healthcare is rationed in the uk, that's the bit about socialized medicine you never hear from the fan boys.
#12

@Rick: Don't fall into the trap of trying to plan your life on the assumption that everything is fixed. A lot can change between now and when you retire, and a lot more after you retire, and I certainly wouldn't bet on the NHS existing in its current forum 27 years from now.
Last edited by Pulaski; Oct 8th 2016 at 3:53 pm.
#13
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Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 4,836
From: Eee Bah Gum











What do other people do? If settling in the US have you managed to make a clean break and not looked back? Have you given up payment of UK National Insurance contributions and then regretted it?
I really don’t know what to do for the best. But it would be helpful to know what others have chosen to do in this situation.
Thank you.
#15
After 5 years living in the USA we got a green cards (including my wife and children) and decided to make a clean break and stopped paying NI contributions. However I changed my mind some years later and started paying voluntary contributions as it is actually a very good deal, ....



