Home Forums Chat Forum Say I wanted to live & work in Gibraltar…

Viewing 33 posts - 1 through 33 (of 33 total)
  • Say I wanted to live & work in Gibraltar…
  • phil5556
    Full Member

    Is it possible now?

    My company has an “office” in Gibraltar where the weather is much sunnier.

    I realise that I have no idea how things work if you moved there. Can you just nip in and out to Spain or would you still be limited to 90 days?

    Could you live in Spain and cross the border to work each day?

    I probably won’t do it, going and working abroad in the sun is something other people do. But you never know…

    What’s the mountain biking like down there??

    1
    misteralz
    Free Member

    Do it. Better to regret the things you did than the things you didn’t.

    tall_martin
    Full Member

    No idea, but I’d like to live vicariously through your experience 😄

    willard
    Full Member

    Gib? It’s a rock. Literally just a rock. I have been there twice for work and it’s essentially just a lot of houses clinging to a large rock. Most of the people I met lived in Spain and crossed the border every day for work and I did not see anyone on a mountain bike the whole time I was there. Or a road bike for that matter.

    Sure, go for work, but I really do not think that it’s a great place for biking.

    kilo
    Full Member

    I believe you’ll still be limited to the 90 days in Spain rule. Fundamentally you’re not an EU citizen so tough- regardless of working in Gib (which in my limited experience is a bit grim).

    3
    WorldClassAccident
    Free Member

    Better to regret the things you did than the things you didn’t. – Have you checked my thread history?

    I have a feeling who has left the Army whilst in Gib and is staying there. If you have any specific questions ask away, I’ll relay and respond back with his answers.

    Tracey
    Full Member

    I was born there, been back once. Not on my list to go back.

    politecameraaction
    Free Member

    Could you live in Spain and cross the border to work each day?

    Not without the legal right to live in Spain, no. And unlike everyone else who overstays and lives in Spain illegally, you’d be offering yourself up for inspection every day! You would also be tax resident in both Spain and Gibraltar (although you wouldn’t need to pay tax at the full rate in both).

    5
    coconut
    Free Member

    I have a feeling who has left the Army whilst in Gib and is staying there

    Anger, sadness, joy, tiredness…. what’s the feeling?

    4
    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    That tonight’s gonna be a good night….

    1

    Anger, sadness, joy, tiredness…. what’s the feeling?

    Haha, epic typo. *friend

    But he’s very happy.

    roger_mellie
    Full Member

    Could you live in Spain and cross the border to work each day?

    Non-Lucrative Visa is probably the only route, but it was intended for retirees having an independent income from another country (and therefore not a drain on Spain’s welfare), so by living in Spain and getting a salary from elsewhere (i.e. hopping over to work in Gib), you run the risk of it either being denied from the outset or at renewal.

    Gibraltar is ok for a visit, but I’d not want to live there.

    *Edited for clarity.

    kormoran
    Free Member

    http://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Operation_Tracer&diffonly=tru

    Some fascinating gibraltar history, operation Tracer

    A secret plan to leave 6 men behind after an invasion, bricked up inside the rock with hidden observation slits over the med and food for seven years.

    jamesoz
    Full Member

    I’ve worked in Gib a bit, It’s ok, wouldn’t be my choice. One of the companies we work(ed) for had guys that were living in Spain and commuting across the border. I’m not 100% but they may have had residentia before Brexit, I have no idea if Brexit caused that to be rescinded.

    grimep
    Free Member

    Gambling company? They’re often based in Gib for regulatory purposes. The office will likely be minimal, not suitable for actual work.

    1
    martinhutch
    Full Member

    Could you live in Spain and cross the border to work each day?

    You’ll need a big enough passport to hold all the entry and exit stamps you’ll queue up for every single working day. The Spanish are (rightly) treating GB and Gibraltar as the third country we were so desperate to become. I know someone who ended up having to fly back to the UK solely to get a fresh passport because his was full after a few weeks.

    Wouldn’t be feasible for more than a few months unless you were resident in Gibraltar.

    3
    robertajobb
    Full Member

    Gambling company? They’re often based in Gib for regulatory *avoidance*  purposes

    FTFY

    mattyfez
    Full Member

    Could be a nice tax dodge if you flit between Spain (EU) and UK (not EU), it’s quite a difficult thing to get away these days though.

    twistedpencil
    Full Member

    I was in and out of Gib about 12years ago for a few years.  It’s an interesting place and I would have considered moving their, if it wasn’t for the border.  Even pre Brexit you could have serious delays.  I used to love staying in a hotel in La Linea and walking across to the office each day, however, I did have the odd day ruined by strikes at the border.  I also got trapped by the RAF having a day of fun on the runway!

    The rock itself is okay, but I think I’d go stir crazy living there, and due to the 90day rule meaning living across the border is out I think it would be a challenge now.   A couple of my marina projects now seem to be landlocked as well, so development is forever pushing out into the sea!

    I do want to go back and check in on old colleagues and projects though.

    1
    IHN
    Full Member

    This may be unfair, inaccurate or out of date, but from the people I know who’ve been it’s incredibly ‘little England-y British’, like living in the Daily Mail.

    phil5556
    Full Member

    Hmm, not a great endorsement from anyone then.

    Tbh we’re so fed up with the Scottish “summer” that it was just a thought and if you all said the mountain biking is ace, go for it then maybe would be worth looking in to.

    I wouldn’t want to be limited to only 90 days out of Gibraltar, so unless there’s a sensible way around that then I’m probably out.

    Gambling company? They’re often based in Gib for regulatory purposes. The office will likely be minimal, not suitable for actual work.

    Nope. And the office itself would be perfectly suitable, the work probably nowhere near as interesting as what I do now.

    phil5556
    Full Member

    This may be unfair, inaccurate or out of date, but from the people I know who’ve been it’s incredibly ‘little England-y British’, like living in the Daily Mail.

    Years ago I went for a day, went for a walk up the rock to see some monkeys and had some food. My memory of it is crossing the runway was a novelty, there were still bobbies on the beat with proper old school helmets & the traffic lights looked like they were from the 80s – your summing up is probably about right I’d imagine.

    1
    gobuchul
    Free Member

    Property in Gib is very expensive.

    A mate of mine is a harbour pilot, lives in Gib but he earns big money.

    Another mate lives just over the border, his Mrs works in Gib but they can’t afford to live there.

    Not sure how they manage since Brexit?

    1
    dudeofdoom
    Full Member

    TBH Spain do have a digital nomad visa so if your only visiting the office a few times a month as opposed to working at it you could actually live in Spain 🙂

    I’d look at it for a taster then explore other avenues if you find that’s the life for you.

    There is life after Brexit it’s just a little more involved and you need more money but I’d definately  give it a go.(Sat in my pants 24°c with a high of 32°c later)

    nicko74
    Full Member

    There is life after Brexit it’s just a little more involved and you need more money but I’d definately  give it a go.(Sat in my pants 24°c with a high of 32°c later)

    But tbf we can all do that now – just need to turn the heating up a bit in our British homes… 😉

    dudeofdoom
    Full Member

    hmm but is your average energy bill €100 a month, we use leccy for everything heating/cooling cooking  and our bill is high compared to others 🙂

    1
    franksinatra
    Full Member

    I’ve spent the day on Gib.  It’s very interesting but it’s still 35k people crammed into a tiny space. It’s busy, polluted and hot. To get any real space you need to go through the border back to Spain so it felt quite claustrophobic to me.   Property is silly expensive, £200k for a studio flat  Interesting history and great to visit but I wouldn’t want to live there.

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    And getting through the border to Spain will get much harder later this year if the new EU border checks come in.

    dudeofdoom
    Full Member

    I was thinking about that today, they were very close to a deal but it was nobbled it at the last moment as the brexies really didn’t like it.

    Its a total farce as 95.91% of its inhabitants voted to stay in the EU.

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    kormoran
    Free Member
    http://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Operation_Tracer&diffonly=tru

    Some fascinating gibraltar history, operation Tracer

    Interesting, hadnt heard of that.

    franksinatra
    Full Member

    when I said in my post that I’ve spent the day on Gib, I meant to say that was today!

    There are more miles of tunnels than roads, about 50km of tunnels. They are staggering, they contain fuel dumps, vehicle workshops, hospitals. The military history there is remarkable but, when you look at its location, that is understandable.

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    They are staggering, they contain fuel dumps, vehicle workshops, hospitals.

    Is that all historic and derelict or is some still in use for potential future conflicts?

    50km of tunnels is incredible, it must be like swiss cheese!lol

Viewing 33 posts - 1 through 33 (of 33 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.