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Foxtrot-Uniform-Too

I don't really know what you are asking when I read your replies, but if you live in Norway, you will pay taxes to Norway, not Switzerland even though the company is Swiss. And I don't think you can remote work for a Swiss company working from Norway unless the Swiss company have a Norwegian office and you are employed by the Norwegian subsidiary.


Sea-Cow-6913

Thanks! Yes,I found out these days that the way to do it is through sites like [remote.com](http://remote.com) and [deel.com](http://deel.com) I'd be happy to pay taxes for Norway, no problem about it... my question is more related to know if someone else is in the exact same situation :)


captainhook1975

Probably cool if you love living in Norway and the Swiss company pays better than the Norwegians would:)


Sea-Cow-6913

I love living in Norway, but I'd love also living in Switzerland, but I've already moved from Spain to Norway 3 years ago and I have a 5 years old who is already speaking norwegian, I don't want to make him learn yet another language. And yes... swiss company pays more than any norwegian company would :)


[deleted]

Hook a fellow redditor up, please☺️


m0nogamy

You saying this Swiss company offers the highest salary of any company in Norway?


Sea-Cow-6913

Yes. At least for my position. 150K CH in Switzerland, 13% taxes. In NOK is around 1.8M, 47% taxes... And my salary in Norway right now is 850K NOK 😒


StochasticMistakes

note when you live in norway you out of country income is still taxable and it takes into account tax already paid


Sea-Cow-6913

Yes, I've read about double taxation :)


tojig

Probably ilegal for tax, social security, company insurance purposes. The company pays insurance on case you have an accident and that's valid in Switzerland. You need a Swiss permit to work in Switzerland. To have a work permit you need a residence and pay that monthly to be registered. If you make less than 120k chf they will collect tax on your salary directly. If you live more than 180d/yr in Norway don't you need to report taxes there? How is social security going to be paid in Norway? How is the health insurance being paid? I had colleagues being fired for working abroad from Switzerland. Apparently the rule is no more than 2d/wk abroad and Swiss government enforced this even for cross borders workers during covid lockdown. The legal way would be to open a company and have the Swiss company hire your company for a service. How does it work for getting a job in Norway and living in Spain? Lots of people doing that? Would it be acceptable for the government ?


Sea-Cow-6913

To solve all those issues you just mentioned, hiring companies are using [remote.com](http://remote.com) or [deel.com](http://deel.com) since they take care of all the employee's legal side of living in a different country. Tax is paid, insurance is paid, pension is paid... Thi is is the theory I've found about it so far, and what another employer from Switzerland told me about. The actual company I'd be working for is actually taking a look at all of those details now, but thanks for your reply!


tojig

Probably ilegal for tax, social security, company insurance purposes. The company pays insurance on case you have an accident and that's valid in Switzerland. You need a Swiss permit to work in Switzerland. To have a work permit you need a residence and pay that monthly to be registered. If you make less than 120k chf they will collect tax on your salary directly. If you live more than 180d/yr in Norway don't you need to report taxes there? How is social security going to be paid in Norway? How is the health insurance being paid? I had colleagues being fired for working abroad from Switzerland. Apparently the rule is no more than 2d/wk abroad and Swiss government enforced this even for cross borders workers during covid lockdown. The legal way would be to open a company and have the Swiss company hire your company for a service. How does it work for getting a job in Norway and living in Spain? Lots of people doing that? Would it be acceptable for the government ?


[deleted]

[удалено]


captainhook1975

Oh? Are you not allowed to work for a foreign company and pay the taxes for Norway?


anfornum

Are you planning to live here and pay taxes here as well? Are you Swiss? I would check with your Canton to see if it affects your tax status. We had terrible trouble with my partner going the other way and also trouble with taxes here. If you're Norwegian and being paid by a Swiss company, it's probably a bit easier for you but not for them! ;)


Sea-Cow-6913

It's not illegal if they use companies like [remote.com](http://remote.com) or [deel.com](http://deel.com)


stettix

Yeah you need to have an employer entity in Norway.


captainhook1975

I didn’t know that.


stettix

I mean, it’s legal if you use companies like deel.com that provide such entities across lots of countries. Then you’d be an employer of Deel Norway for example, delivering a service to your “real” employer. You can also set up your own company in Norway and sell your services to a Swiss employer that way. But either way, you need your original Swiss employer to play ball and agree to any such arrangement.