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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
Hi Zimba, thanks for your reply. Can you please also calrify that can we consider 120h/month a full time job as in application form and policy guide line?zimba88 wrote:For a single job, you require 52 weeks of full time work which is set at min of 30 hours a week as per EU laws. Anything worked over 30 hours in a week is ignored.
Total hours is not an important factor because you can have an employee for 6 months and 60 hours a week which gives you 1560 hours but it is not acceptable as the hours were not created over 52 weeks.
Hi Zimba, thanks for clarification. One more question plz (although i will talk my accountant tomorrow about it), the salary slips for Dec 2016 shows 126h,should be 132h if we calculate 30h/week. This is due to one holiday for my employees during christmas. Can we sort it now and report to HMRC and pay them extra 6h pay? Its mid of January, is it legally possible now?zimba88 wrote:Rules do not say anything about 120 hours a month. As I demonstrated above, you must maintain 2 full time positions for at least a year. IGNORE the total hours worked.
Dear Zimba88,zimba88 wrote:As I repeated several times, the hours worked are IRRELEVANT if the position is full time. Monthly salary slips almost never show hours worked.
To score points you need to put ONLY the period of employment and the hourly rate on the form. There is no requirement to enter the hours worked.
If you had a full time position for 52 weeks you are good.
Dear Zimba88,zimba88 wrote:I am not disputing that, software is flexible for all kind of pay arrangements. However in most cases no one puts those on if they are paid monthly and not per hour