4

I have a very specific question about invoicing a company in another EU country. The circumstances are as follows:

  1. I live in country A.
  2. The Company being invoiced resides in country B.
  3. I have a bank account in country B.
  4. I am a part-time employer (employed in country A).
  5. I want to invoice the Company in country's B currency (money would be then transferred to my bank account in country B).
  6. I want to pay taxes related to these invoices in country A.

Is that generally accepted pattern / scenario? Does that mean the invoice should include VAT? If so, which country's tax rate should I use?

1
  • I would talk to an accountant, but I don't see why that would be an issue. Just go and declare your earnings to your local financial institution. You might have to move the money in country A though. Being in the EU means you can pretty much open an account in any EU currency depending on your local banks so with that consideration in mind I think you can declare revenue in any currency
    – Indra
    Commented Mar 27, 2018 at 13:31

1 Answer 1

3

I used to do the same thing (Part-time employed in country A, as well as self-employed invoicing other clients in country B in a different currency), so I'll tell you what I did.

  1. Create a self-employed company in country A
  2. Create a bank account in country A - with currency of country B, and link that account to your self-employed company
  3. Ask your Revenue office (from country A) to issue you a VIES number. In this case you'll be allowed to invoice any company in EU, and shouldn't be worried about VAT.

After all that you should pay tax to the Revenue office from country A according to country A regulations.

I want to invoice the Company in country's B currency (money would be then transferred to my bank account in country B).

As far as I know that's only possible if you create a self-employed company in country B.

NOTE Please be advised that I'm not an accountant or a lawyer, for a specialized answer contact your local Revenue office.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.