As employee mobility increases, businesses need to understand the tax and compliance implications of people working across borders.

Kate Gott and Amanda Varrall discuss the key risks for employers moving staff into and out of the UK.

The conversation highlights how even short-term business travel can create tax and social security obligations. Amanda explains common pitfalls and the importance of understanding responsibilities in every jurisdiction involved.

They also explore how business structures and remote working arrangements can affect tax and social security exposure, often in ways employers may not anticipate.

Amanda’s advice is clear: seek advice early, consider tax and compliance obligations holistically, and work closely with employees and advisers to reduce risk and support successful international assignments and moves.

Key points

Contrary to common belief, non-resident directors sitting on UK boards do not always pay UK National Insurance contributions.

Social security liabilities are dependent on detailed individual circumstances and applicable bilateral agreements.

Failure to accurately assess can result in compliance failures spanning multiple countries, as companies may need to register for social security obligations in other jurisdictions.

Having or not having a UK permanent establishment (PE) affects corporation tax exposure but does not negate employment tax responsibilities.

Someone physically working in the UK can trigger tax and/or social security requirements, and other regulatory compliance, independent of corporation tax status.

This distinction is crucial for international groups determining whether to establish subsidiaries, branches, or operate without a corporation tax presence.

Complying with host country rules and obligations is imperative and sometimes overlooked obligations on inbound cross-border workers.

Neglecting these formalities typically results in employer fines and jeopardises future operational permissions.

Companies must carefully assess the rights to work, tax exposure, and social security requirements for remote workers internationally to avoid unexpected liabilities.

Two seemingly identical cases can yield vastly different tax and social security profiles due to subtle variations in circumstances such as previous visits/stays, residency, length of stay, family involvement, or intended work activities.

This underlines the critical importance of bespoke advice, detailed fact-finding, and ongoing communication with both employees and multi-jurisdictional advisors to optimise compliance and reduce unexpected burdens.

Amanda’s recommendations encapsulate best practice:

(1) seek early advice before any move to fully map the obligations across corporation tax, employment tax; and social security;

(2) consider the legal, tax, and social security dimensions holistically to avoid piecemeal compliance; and

(3) support employees proactively, recognising their responsibilities and personal situations to create sustainable, compliant international assignments that prevent disruption and maintain employee wellbeing.

This integrated approach reduces risk and enhances corporate and employee experience when dealing with complex global mobility issues.

  • Structure remuneration packages for tax and social security efficiency and clarity
  • Assess potential tax and social security implications before any cross-border move
  • Consult international advisors to understand multi-jurisdictional obligations
  • Verify registration and compliance requirements for specific countries
  • Develop clear Global Mobility and Remote Working policies aligned with tax and social security regulations
  • Engage with employees and families to understand individual circumstances and support needs

International workforce mobility creates opportunities for growth, but it also brings complex tax, social security and compliance obligations that can quickly become costly if they’re overlooked.

BKL’s corporate tax and global mobility specialists work together to provide joined-up advice across UK and international tax, employment tax, PAYE, social security and cross-border compliance. Whether you’re sending employees overseas, bringing talent into the UK or managing remote workers across multiple jurisdictions, we can help you identify risks early, meet your obligations and develop practical solutions that work for both your business and your people.

Early planning is often the difference between a smooth international assignment and an expensive compliance issue.

If you’re reviewing your global mobility arrangements or planning an overseas move, we’d be happy to discuss how BKL can help.

Amanda Varrall

Head of Global Mobility

View Amanda Varrall's profile

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