Hello All,
My family is planning on moving to Finland next year on a remigration visa. My husband and I will both continue to work for American companies . Does anyone here have any experience with this? Im wondering if we will have trouble getting a mortgage? Looking for advice . Thanks
American Incomes
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Re: American Incomes
You should check double taxation rules between your country and Finland, and tell your employers that they have to report all salary payments to the Finnish Incomes Register. https://www.vero.fi/en/incomes-register ... ligations/technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amMy family is planning on moving to Finland next year on a remigration visa. My husband and I will both continue to work for American companies . Does anyone here have any experience with this?
Some mortgage might be possible, but it's unlikely to be as much as with employment in Finland under Finnish rules.technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amIm wondering if we will have trouble getting a mortgage?
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Re: American Incomes
It’s also possible to become an entrepreneur and invoice the American company to shift the burden of Finnish bureaucracy away from them.FinlandGirl wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:35 amYou should check double taxation rules between your country and Finland, and tell your employers that they have to report all salary payments to the Finnish Incomes Register. https://www.vero.fi/en/incomes-register ... ligations/technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amMy family is planning on moving to Finland next year on a remigration visa. My husband and I will both continue to work for American companies . Does anyone here have any experience with this?
With the positive credit register coming online and integrating with the incomes register banks will mostly just trust the information there so it shouldn’t really matter whether the payer is domestic or foreign.FinlandGirl wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:35 amSome mortgage might be possible, but it's unlikely to be as much as with employment in Finland under Finnish rules.technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amIm wondering if we will have trouble getting a mortgage?
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Re: American Incomes
Finnish banks usually want you to have been a resident for a couple years before they will approve a mortgage.technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amDoes anyone here have any experience with this? Im wondering if we will have trouble getting a mortgage?
Re: American Incomes
That is not true. Im from xUSSR country and got mortgage after 6 mobths living here. Not sure if any legistlation changed though but if job is stable Finnish Banks do not have issuesbetelgeuse wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:01 amFinnish banks usually want you to have been a resident for a couple years before they will approve a mortgage.technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amDoes anyone here have any experience with this? Im wondering if we will have trouble getting a mortgage?
Re: American Incomes
technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amHello All,
My family is planning on moving to Finland next year on a remigration visa. My husband and I will both continue to work for American companies . Does anyone here have any experience with this? Im wondering if we will have trouble getting a mortgage? Looking for advice . Thanks
Pls read this one it is official
https://www.infofinland.fi/en/housing/buying-a-home
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Re: American Incomes
Banks make their own rules in regard to the details of credit rating their customers. I don't have recent anecdotes so they could have changed and "usually" was a reference to the fact that individual factors are in play. If the credit risk is low, they might be willing to accept shorter residency.TUserFin wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 1:10 pmThat is not true. Im from xUSSR country and got mortgage after 6 mobths living here. Not sure if any legistlation changed though but if job is stable Finnish Banks do not have issuesbetelgeuse wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:01 amFinnish banks usually want you to have been a resident for a couple years before they will approve a mortgage.technoforrest wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:10 amDoes anyone here have any experience with this? Im wondering if we will have trouble getting a mortgage?
Re: American Incomes
bizarrely if you have money in the bank and don't need a mortgage then things can take longer. I bought a house without needing a mortgage (or existing house to sell) and it took months longer because I had to prove where the money came from (the concept that you might earn more than you spend and have "savings" is obviously a new concept to some banks).
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Re: American Incomes
You can't blame the banks for EU money laundering rules.riku2 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 3:27 pmbizarrely if you have money in the bank and don't need a mortgage then things can take longer. I bought a house without needing a mortgage (or existing house to sell) and it took months longer because I had to prove where the money came from (the concept that you might earn more than you spend and have "savings" is obviously a new concept to some banks).
Re: American Incomes
You don't need to get foreign employer to use income register.
My employer doesn't, I just declare foreign income in my tax card.
Nordea also offered me a bank loan after being here for about half a year.
My employer doesn't, I just declare foreign income in my tax card.
Nordea also offered me a bank loan after being here for about half a year.
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Re: American Incomes
Foreign income is usually handled through tax prepayment.betelgeuse wrote: ↑Fri Feb 16, 2024 7:59 amIf an employer doesn’t use the incomes register, a tax card is irrelevant so this doesn’t make sense. Do you mean tax return?
Order your tax card, go to the page other income and scroll down and press "show more". Select the "Other income subject to prepayments" and add the income on section Wages subject to prepayments, for which health care contribution and daily allowance contribution is imposed or Wages subject to prepayments, for which no health care contribution or daily allowance contribution is imposed.