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by knbknb 1230 days ago
"> I find myself imaging what it would be like if my husband and I retire to Germany."

I think in case she has dual citizenship, she still has to pay into German social security. These payments are mandatory and contributions are accrued over a lifetime.

I think The minimum fee is about 150 Euros per month and family (even as an "inactive" citizen).

Maybe she can refuse to pay ("Hey, I've moved back to the UK / never moved to Germany"), but this also means almost? no pension payments later, and she can expect trouble when paying invoices for any German doctor or hospital.

Of course she can live off her wealth (gained in the UK) as a Pensioner in Germany but I think when she never contributed to German Social Security she cannot expect much. In this respect, Bookkeeping by German authorities is very accurate, over decades, to the penny.

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Pensions and social security, as wrll as health insurance, have nothing to do with citizenship. The key is emoloyment (or voluntary contributions) when working in Germany. That applies to every EU citizen (usually no working visa required) and people working in Germany with working visas.

Obviously, it is more benfitial to gather pension in a high cost and salary country (e.g. Germany) and retire to a low cost country. No idea how UK pensions compare to German ones.

One health insurance benefit German citizenship gives you, is the option to keep German health insurance, also covering health care abroad, as an expat for up to 5 (?, might be ten) for close to nothing. For some funny reason doing so while based in the US is considerably more expensive than the rest of the world...

This is true. I became a dual German citizen 15 years ago and paid no tax or social security contributions. I only started paying those once I moved to Germany and started working here a few years ago
German doctors and hospitals will cheerfully bill you directly, no insurance necessary. They would be hesitant to schedule you for a very expensive procedure without an insurance card, but I just had surgery to insert and later remove pins to heal a broken finger as a "Selbstzahler" (self-payer), because I'm privately insured. This means that they simply sent me the bills, totaling about 1000 EUR, I paid them out of my checking account, and it's my own problem to get re-imbursed from my insurer. I think they checked my ID to make sure the billing address was legit.

Edited to add: I am merely a permanent resident of Germany, not a dual citizen.

And if a resident, you can easily get public health insurance (if you choose to, private insurance sure has its upsides).
I was a weird edge case, so had to get private: at the time of my residence permit application, I was a resident of a country that did not have compulsory health insurance (pre-ACA USA), married to a German with private insurance, and not yet employed (and no immediate prospects). I had to have German health insurance to get the residence permit, so private it was.
That makes sense. One has to love all those edge cases, right? I always choose to stick with public health care, even if I am elibible for private insurance for years now. There are reasons for that so, not the least some nasty past medical issues public insurers don't care about but private ones would at least increade premiums over.

The fun thing with private insurance so is that you see the invoices and amounts. Always puzzles me when I see those from my Dad...

Private insurance is great if you get it young enough, and without pre existing stuff, and get good conditions concerning premium increases with age.

German health insurers can price insurance based on health conditions? Wow.

>Private insurance is great if you get it young enough, and without pre existing stuff, and get good conditions concerning premium increases with age.

What does this mean? Premiums (or premium increases) for life are determined when the health insurance policy is originally issued?

Private health insurance in Geany is tricky, and since I stick with public I only have limited insight from the few times I looked at private insurance.

So, rule of thumb is that private health insurance gets more expensive with age and previous health issues (everything from injuries, sports, diseases, cancers...). So it is benefitial to get into privatr insurance early, because insurers price premiums over the expected life time value. As a result, the earlier to start paying into it, the lower the premiums down the road are going to be. E.g. some government jobs have defacto private insurance, and no way into public one, and if people do not start contributing during their active service, once they loose state provided coverage (again different from public insurance), premiums sky rocket upon retirement.

Public insurers (private companies offering the legally defined coverage) have to take everyone (some edge case exceptions apply to e.g. artists and the like), cannot adopt premiums based on anything patient related (thry have some leeway based on internal cost to increase premium for everyone of their members by a limited percentage).

Private insurers can more or less do whatever they want, even excluding pre existing conditions in some cases. Sucks if you had, e.g., cancer early in your life.

This is less of a problem for UK citizens, since the statepension is pretty bad. Most people Here pit money in a pensionfund, e.g for me my pension is about 90% from my pension fund and the state part is just an extra(not that I expect i will ever receive it).
I'd assume she'd still receive her UK pension, right? Depending on the exchange rate and possible tax implications it may end up being less than it would be back in the UK, but having contributed to a pension scheme she'll still presumably get something back, just not from the German system.
> and she can expect trouble when paying invoices for any German doctor or hospital.

What? Your social security is linked to your health insurance, how? Doesn't make sense.

It is not directly linked. Both are linked to employment (sozialversicherungspflichtig, what atrue German word) which gives you health insurance, social security, unemployment and retirement. Lower salary ranges give you health insurance, but sometimes not unemployment or social security (not sure about the latter without looking it up), while freelancing or being a GM at a company (your own or someone elses) can come without retirement or unemoloyment benefits. Except some extreme edge cases, there is no way to be not health insured in Germany. There are multiple ways to not have unemployment, social security or retirement benefits. The prudent path here is to either contribute voluntarily (expensive with the exception of unemployment) or pick privtar alternatives. None of that so is connected to citizenship so.