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We are currently staying in Germany with EU blue card. My husband is working in Germany and we have two kids. I got an offer from a good company in Prague with good salary. I can choose Prague or Norway. I need to go to Prague/Norway office three days a week. Is it possible to live in Germany and travel to office for those three days in a week ? Is it legally allowed?

I understand that I need to register in Prague/Norway and my salary will be processed in Prague/Norway. But I am not sure if I need to pay tax in Germany.

I am also not sure how this works with health insurance. We are planning to get permanent residency by this year end. Will this be affected?

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    Czechia or Norway? I'm not aware of any town called Prague in Norway, but that might be a gap in my education. Just from the logistics, Czechia sounds a lot more feasible than Norway. Or are they giving you a choice of locations?
    – o.m.
    Commented Jul 6 at 9:50

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Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer. As for dual taxation, I have some practical experience with Germany/Italy and Germany/Lithuania, but not specifically with Czechia/Germany.

I take it that you are a non-EU citizen but staying in the EU on a blue card, which allows the (non-EU citizen) holder to live and work in the entire EU, except for Denmark and Ireland.

As such, you would be allowed to live and work in Germany as well as in Czechia. Hence in terms of residence and work permit, Prague would not be an issue. Norway might be a different story – while part of the Schengen area, it is not covered by the blue card.

Taxation might be an issue, and a somewhat less standardized one – there is no such thing as a common taxation area; rather, it is down to agreements between the individual states involved. What you want to look at is an agreement on dual taxation between the Czech Republic and the Federal Republic of Germany. These tend to look at factors such as the number of days spent in one state or the other, which state the entity paying the salary is located in, and where your main residence (“Lebensmittelpunkt” in German) lies.

If your salary is paid in Czechia (i.e. by a Czech company), that would be an argument for taxation in Czechia.

If your husband and children live in Germany, then Germany would likely be your “Lebensmittelpunkt”, a factor in favor of taxation in Germany.

Three days per week in Prague add up to a maximum of 156 days, which is less than half of the year. If you consider vacation days, it might come out at even less, but if you were to decide to stay in Prague Wednesday to Wednesday, including the weekend in between, and/or spend your vacation in Czechia, you might end up spending more than half of the year there. Spending the majority of the year in one particular state tends to be an argument for paying your taxes there.

In short: As far as work and residence permits go, Prague/Czechia is likely the easier option. As for taxation, things are more complicated. Maybe your new employer has the expertise to help you on this if they offer contracts to people working in other EU states nearly half of the time. Other than that, you can either choose to study the dual taxation agreement between Czechia and Germany, or get professional advice.

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    A lot of useful info (+1) but that's not exactly how the Blue Card works: It allows the holder to live in one country and to transition more easily to another one but it's not a residence permit covering the whole EU. So if you move to another EU country, you are still supposed to apply for a new EU Blue Card from that country.
    – Relaxed
    Commented Aug 10 at 22:46
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    Another difficulty is that the OP seems to be on a Blue Card for family members, which explicitly covers only employment rights in the country where the main Blue Card holder is located, cf. article 17(6) of the directive “[…] family members shall have access to any employment, and to self-employed activity in accordance with applicable requirements under national law, in the Member State concerned.
    – Relaxed
    Commented Aug 10 at 22:51

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