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Working in Belgium under a Single Permit - Who your employer is

ruslan.galkanov

I was told recently (and verified with with the Law on Foreigners of 1980) that even though your single permit can be granted continuously on a five-year basis, then, when you want to apply for an unlimited permit and later requalify it into another card (permanent residency), this apparently won't work if your employer is based outside of Belgium.  So, an example of mine: I am working for an American company with a branch in Belgium, and my contract is with the head office in the US.  I am a tax resident in Belgium, paying all those taxes, social security, etc., NOT UNDER AN EXPAT REGIME - the surprise is that all of that is futile, does not count towards anything, you pay huge taxes, and then at the end you can't convert it into anything tangible just because you work for an US entity, although its branch has a Belgian enterprise number (BCE), etc.  Did anyone encounter this? 

See also

Living in Brussels: the expat guideSeeking advice on F to F+ CardA card = UselessOCI Card/Evisa for india travelSchools in Brussels
Elena Igor

Why can’t the contract be under the belgian branch?

ruslan.galkanov

@Elena Igor

The contract can be with the Belgian branch (which is not a legal entity under Belgian law, or any law worldwide), but it does not change the underlying premise: the employer effectively remains an American one (in my case).  This was exactly the reason for the amendment of the law in 2020 - one has to demonstrate having worked continuously for a purely Belgian entity.  This truly defeats the purpose of streamlining one's path to the Belgian PR (and likely citizenship) by legally buying your way by paying taxes.Â