Nickndrachael
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[quote user="Sunday Driver"] Given that interest rates on savings are so much better in the UK, you'd be best off leaving your money there. You'd still need to declare the UK interest earned for French tax purposes. [/quote] That does of course depend to some extent on what you think is going to happen to the exchange rate in the near future.
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French house prices fall
Nickndrachael replied to Llantony's topic in Finding/Owning French Property
Just to go back to the agents commission discussion... We have just put our house on the market and agreed with one agent that it would be "semi exclusive" in which case they agreed to receive 50% less commission. As it is a relatively expensive house this would represent a saving to the buyer of many, many pennies and will therefore hopefully make it easier to sell - which is why we did it. However, as we are also using a different agent with different commission rates it means that the property is advertised (inclusive of agents fees) in two different places at two different prices, which is just a bit confusing. -
How does this 16.4% deemed VAT work? I'm about to sell my 2 year old house and I wasn't expecting any more bills...
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We feed our dog raw food which we get from a local(ish) butcher. The butchers in our tourist village were very sniffy about being asked whether they would supply RMBs for a dog (almost as if why would they stoop to such a level) but a butcher in the non-tourist local town has been really helpful. We used to get mostly chicken necks with a side supply of "sternum de veau". We've stopped the chicken neck order for the time being and are now getting 50:50 sternum and lamb breast. Ask around would be my advice.
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Just one of the many cultural differences you have to get used to![:)]
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Does anyone know what legal or other costs are applicable when remortgaging? I have a variable rate mortgage, with no penalties for early redemption. I'd expect to pay an arrangement fee to a new lender, but are there any significant legal costs for re-registering the mortgage etc?
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Sorry if this has been answered previously, but I've been through the pages and can't see it clearly. If turnover is below the threshold (i've seen 15% of 27k mentioned) does that mean that you don't have to register with URSSAF/Chamber of Commerce and you just fill in your tax return at the end of the year?
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The OH spoke to the local tax office and apparently we are in one of the rare communes which doesn't apply the exemption. Fantastic.
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Having purchased a new build house last year, we were under the impression that we would be exempt from tax fonciere for 2 years. Having now received a large tax fonciere bill that we weren't expecting can anyone clarify what the rules are? It appears that we have been exempted from the district and regional part of the tax fonciere bill but not the communal part.
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Change of law re bringing puppies into France
Nickndrachael replied to Nickndrachael's topic in Pets
The reason that the breeder wants the pups to go at 8-9 weeks is because for her this is an important time for bonding with the dog - I think she is worried that if the dog isn't picked up until it is 4 months old then it will have past the best "getting to know us" period. I know there are different arguments for letting them go at different ages but this is what the breeder wants. The annoying thing is that the rules are very inconsistent. It is possible for a pup to cross the border with the mother before 12 weeks without the jabs, but it is not allowed to stay without the mother. Where is the sense in that?! Apparently dogs cross all the borders (Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland) all the time without paperwork, but clearly it is not the "right" thing to do. -
My wife and I were in the process of buying a (rare) puppy from a Swiss breeder. We had done our research on the various websites about the procedure for importing into France, - the puppy had to be at least 3 months old and have received the second lot of vaccinations. We confirmed this with the vet at the douane to confirm just a week or two ago and he said that we didn't need to stop at the border but if we were stopped then we would just need to show the paperwork that proved the age and that the vaccinations had happened. Now that the puppies are born we have discussed this with the breeder. Apparently, and this has just been confirmed with the ministry in Paris, the law has changed recently so now the puppies have to have received the rabies jab AND WAIT ANOTHER 30 DAYS before they can be brought in - something to do with recent rabies problems from Morocco. 16 weeks is too late for us and the breeder. Ignoring the ethics issues for now, what would happen if we brought the dog in at 3 months. We would want a pet passport, and would want it to have all the correct jabs, so we will obviously need to visit a vet. Would the vet report us? Would he perform the chipping for us? We're trying to come up with ideas at the moment as this seems ridiculous (Switzerland is a rabies free country) and had our hearts set.
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qualifications needed to teach English?
Nickndrachael replied to hoverfrog's topic in Earning a Living
"Her indoors" is a British qualified PGCE (French and German) and has a TEFL from a good college but she cannot teach in a French state school with these qualifications. She is currently working for a private school in Geneva (where most of the English teachers have only TEFL as a qualification). As far as I am aware there are no requirements to have any qualification to teach in a private institution (it depends on what they want).