Článok o zdroji
Cross-border employment in the European Union: tax and social security essentials
How taxation and social security work for employees who live in one EU country and work in another: the 183-day rule, A1 certificates, double-taxation treaties, the special situation of frontier workers and the practical impact on take-home pay.
Čo sa naučíte
- The general principle: tax follows residence, contributions follow work
- The A1 certificate and posted workers
- Frontier workers: the special case of daily commuters
- Implications for remote and hybrid arrangements
The general principle: tax follows residence, contributions follow work
European cross-border employment is governed by two distinct sets of rules that often produce different country attributions. Income tax usually follows the worker's tax residence under the relevant double-taxation treaty: the country in which the worker has their main home and centre of vital interests has the primary right to tax salary income. Social security contributions, by contrast, usually follow the country in which work is physically performed, under EU Regulation 883/2004 on the coordination of social security systems.
In simple cases (live and work in the same country), the two attributions coincide and there is no cross-border complexity. In genuinely cross-border cases the two attributions can split: a Belgian resident commuting daily to Luxembourg pays Luxembourg social security but is taxed (in part) in Belgium under the Belgium-Luxembourg double-taxation treaty.
The 183-day rule from many tax treaties allows the country of residence to retain the primary tax claim if the worker spends fewer than 183 days in any twelve-month period in the work country, and if the salary is paid by an employer not resident in the work country and not borne by a permanent establishment there. Understanding which conditions apply in any specific situation requires reading the actual bilateral tax treaty rather than relying on the general rule.
The A1 certificate and posted workers
An A1 portable document is the official confirmation that a worker remains subject to the social security legislation of one EU member state while working in another. It is issued by the social security authority of the home country and presented to the host country authorities and to the employer to evidence that the worker continues to contribute at home rather than in the host country.
The A1 is essential for postings (employees temporarily sent to work in another EU country by their home-country employer) and for genuinely multi-state work patterns. Travelling for business meetings in another EU country without an A1 is a grey area that is increasingly enforced; cross-border audit and labour inspections during business trips have become more frequent in some member states.
The standard maximum duration for a posting under A1 is twenty-four months, extendable in exceptional cases by mutual agreement between the home and host social security authorities. Beyond that point the worker is normally expected to switch to the social security system of the country where they actually work.
Frontier workers: the special case of daily commuters
Frontier workers are employees who live in one country and commute daily (or at least weekly) to work in a neighbouring country. The most populous frontier flows in Europe are the Belgium-Luxembourg, France-Switzerland (Geneva), France-Luxembourg, France-Germany (Strasbourg/Karlsruhe), Italy-Switzerland (Ticino) and Slovakia-Austria (Bratislava-Vienna) corridors.
Several bilateral treaties grant frontier workers a special tax and social security status that differs from the standard cross-border treatment. The France-Switzerland frontier worker treaty for Geneva, for example, attributes income tax primarily to the canton of work with a partial transfer to the French municipality of residence. The Belgium-Luxembourg treaty was extensively reformed in 2024 to clarify the attribution of remote-work days for frontier workers.
The widespread shift to hybrid working since 2022 has stress-tested these frameworks because remote-work days are typically performed in the worker's country of residence rather than the work country. Several treaties now include explicit thresholds (typically twenty-five or thirty-four percent of working time) below which remote work in the residence country does not trigger a change in tax or social security attribution.
Implications for remote and hybrid arrangements
If your employee lives in one EU country and works fully remotely for an employer in another, the social security system of the country of residence applies in most cases under EU rules — meaning the employer needs to register and pay social contributions in the country where the employee actually works (their country of residence) rather than the country where the employer is established. This creates a significant administrative burden that many small employers underestimate before hiring across borders.
Tax treatment is more complex and depends on the bilateral treaty. In many cases the country of residence has the primary right to tax the salary, but the employer's country may also have a withholding obligation for the days physically worked there. The interaction with the 183-day rule and with the permanent establishment concept needs to be analysed case by case.
Practical advice: before allowing a permanent remote arrangement that crosses an EU border, get a written analysis from a qualified payroll provider or international employment lawyer for the specific country pair and arrangement. The cost of getting the analysis is far lower than the cost of unwinding a non-compliant arrangement six months later.
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