The current EU rules on the coordination of social security systems will continue to apply to previously acquired rights even after the end of the transitional period on 31 December 2020.These rules provide that if you only receive a pension from one state and reside in another state, the state paying your pension is responsible for providing your health insurance cover. This means that your healthcare costs in the UK will continue to be covered by the UK social security system on behalf of France. The new social security agreement between Switzerland and the United Kingdom has been signed and published1 and it is planned to apply it provisionally from 1 November 2021, subject to the approval of the competent UK authorities. The agreement itself largely corresponds to the coordination of social security systems under the new EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement2 and is based on the principles of EU coordination law that Switzerland applies under the AFMP. Source: Trade and Cooperation Agreement between the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community, of the one part, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, of the other part, PbEU 2020, L 444/14 You are entitled to free hospital insurance at the age of 65 if you have worked long enough under US social security to be entitled to a pension. People born in 1929 or later need 40 credits (about 10 years of covered work) to qualify for retirement benefits. Although the agreement between the United States and France allows the Social Security Administration to count your French credits to help you qualify for the United States. Retirement, disability or survivor benefits, the agreement does not cover health insurance benefits. Therefore, we cannot count your credits in France to establish eligibility for free Medicare hospital insurance. A certificate of coverage issued by one country serves as proof of exemption from social security tax on the same income in the other country. Agreements with other EU countries are equally restrictive in terms of how long a worker can stay in their home country. However, with an employer NIC of 13.8% and up to 12% for employees, the UK has one of the lowest social security rates in the EU.

This is comparable to countries like France and Belgium, where social contributions can exceed 30%. Under the Withdrawal Agreement, provided your situation remains the same, your health insurance coverage and membership rules will remain the same. You are still entitled to the same benefits under the same rules as you are today. 3 Article 14 of the Switzerland/United Kingdom Agreement, available at the following address: www.bsv.admin.ch/bsv/de/home/sozialversicherungen/int/brexit.html. The free trade agreement applies to the EU and therefore only to the EU Member States. Switzerland and the EEA countries are not (yet) included in this agreement. Either its current bilateral social security agreement with the United Kingdom or its national legislation should apply. Between these countries and the UK, there may be no or dual social security coverage for mobile workers. Note As shown in the table, the agreement can only assign U.S.

coverage to a U.S. employee who works temporarily in France if they work for a U.S. employer. A U.S. employer includes a company organized under U.S. or federal law, a partnership if at least two-thirds of the partners are U.S. Residents, a person residing in the United States, or a trust if all trustees are residents of the United States. The term also includes a foreign subsidiary of a U.S. employer if the U.S. employer has entered into an agreement with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) pursuant to Section 3121(l) of the Internal Revenue Code to pay social security taxes to U.S. citizens and residents employed by the affiliate. If you are currently working in the UK and are over 31 years old.

In December 2020, the rules for the coordination of social security provisions will continue to apply under the Withdrawal Agreement. All periods of employment that you have accumulated in the United Kingdom before and after this date will be taken into account, as well as your periods accumulated in France, for eligible purposes and in the calculation of your rights to the French and British old-age pension. Impact on social security: Working arrangements would be implemented in two countries, suggesting that the provisions would apply to multi-state workers. As a multi-state worker performing 25% of the work tasks in the country of habitual residence, the social security laws of the country of habitual residence would apply, in this case Switzerland. If the UK employer is not present in Switzerland, the employee may agree to fulfil the employer`s obligations on his behalf with regard to the payment of contributions. .