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Full Time Work Overseas Test UK: What You Need to Know Before You Go

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Thinking of leaving the UK to work overseas? The Full-Time Work Overseas test is one of the most powerful, and misunderstood, parts of the UK’s Statutory Residence Test.

Working overseas full time sounds like a clear route to UK tax non-residency. Many people assume that leaving the country and working abroad will be enough on its own.

It is not quite that simple.

The full time work overseas test is one of the most technically demanding parts of the UK Statutory Residence Test. Meet every criterion and your foreign income falls outside UK tax entirely. Miss a single criterion and the test fails.

Here is exactly how it works.

What Is the Full Time Work Overseas Test?

The full time work overseas test sits within the UK Statutory Residence Test. It gives HMRC a framework to decide whether you qualify as non-resident for a given tax year based on your overseas work pattern.

Passing this test means UK tax does not apply to your foreign employment income. For anyone working abroad on a substantial salary, that is a significant financial benefit.

The test applies in two situations. First, where you work overseas for a complete tax year. Second, where you leave the UK part way through a tax year to start full time work overseas.

The Three Criteria You Must Meet

To pass the full time work overseas test for a complete tax year, you must satisfy all three of the following criteria. Missing any one of them means the test fails.

Work Full Time Overseas Across the Whole Tax Year

Full time means an average of at least 35 hours per week working overseas. Do not take a significant break from overseas work at any point during the year.

HMRC defines a significant break as 31 or more consecutive days where none count as an overseas workday. Annual leave, parenting leave and sick leave do not contribute to that 31 day total.

Spend No More Than 90 Midnights in the UK

Every visit to the UK counts towards this limit. The reason for the visit makes no difference. Business trips, family visits and holidays all count equally.

Work in the UK for No More Than 30 Days

A working day is any day on which you work for three or more hours in a 24 hour period. Keep careful records of every UK working day, however briefly the work crosses the three hour threshold.

The International Transportation Worker Exception

This test does not cover international transportation workers with six or more work journeys starting or ending in the UK per year. Pilots, cabin crew and others in similar roles fall outside its scope entirely. They need to consider alternative routes to non-residency.

What Happens When You Leave Part Way Through the Tax Year?

This is where the test becomes more complicated, and where most errors occur.

Starting work overseas part way through a tax year means you cannot simply claim non-residency from your departure date. Instead, you must meet the full time overseas criteria from your first overseas workday until the end of the following complete tax year.

The Pro-Rata Day Counts

Leaving part way through a year reduces the day count limits proportionally. Departing in October, roughly six months into the UK tax year, cuts your limits to approximately 15 working days and 45 midnights rather than the full 30 and 90.

Many people assume the full limits apply from departure. They do not. This is one of the most common mistakes we see.

How Long Do You Need to Comply?

Take this example. You start working overseas in October 2026. Compliance with the full time overseas criteria must continue until April 2028. That amounts to roughly 18 months of continuous compliance to secure non-residency from your departure date.

Split Year Treatment

Leaving the UK part way through a year may allow you to apply split year treatment. Under this approach, HMRC treats you as UK tax resident from the previous April until your first overseas workday. From that workday until the end of the tax year, you count as non-resident.

Benefiting from non-residency in the following year still requires passing the full time overseas test for that entire year. Many people overlook this second hurdle entirely.

The Retroactive Collapse Risk

Relying on split year treatment in the year you leave, then failing the full time overseas test in the following year, causes your split year treatment to collapse retroactively.

Going back and revising your position as UK tax resident for the period you thought was covered carries significant tax consequences.

Are There Any Exceptions?

Two specific situations may offer alternative routes. Ceasing to have a UK home is one. Being the partner of someone working full time overseas is another. Both require careful analysis before you rely on them.

Why You Need Advice Before You Leave

The full time work overseas test has more moving parts than most people expect. Day counts are strict. Pro-rata calculations require precision. Many people misunderstand the need to pass the test across two consecutive tax years.

Getting this wrong can unwind your entire non-residency position, not just the year you leave.

Speak to LSR Partners before you go. The earlier we talk, the more options you have.

LSR Partners help you pay the right tax in the right place at the right time. Book a call with us at lsrpartners.com.


This article is for general information purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Your individual circumstances will affect how these rules apply to you. Please contact us to discuss your specific position.

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LSR Partners - UK tax clarity for global clients
We are a firm of UK tax advisors with specific expertise in UK tax regulations for those with financial interests both in the UK and abroad.
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