What the Teleworking Agreement Is About
The multilateral framework agreement, drafted by the EU’s Administrative Commission for the Coordination of Social Security Systems, is based on Article 16(1) of Regulation (EC) No. 883/2004. It addresses the challenge of cross-border telework by allowing employees to work from their country of residence for less than 50 percent of their working time, while maintaining social security coverage in their employer’s country.
To benefit from this arrangement, the employer and the employee must apply for an A1 certificate, which confirms the applicable social security legislation in the country of employer. Retroactive applications for the A1 certificate are limited to a maximum of three months. The certificate is typically issued for a specific duration ranging from one to three years at a time.
Key Points
- Eligibility: Applies only when both the employee’s country of residence and the employer’s country are signatories.
- Scope: Covers telework arrangements, and work is done exclusively in the country of the employee’s residence and the country of the employer.
- Social Security: Employees retain social security coverage in the employer’s country.
- Previous Rules: Prior to this agreement, cross-border employees could only telework up to 25 percent of their time under employer-country social security coverage. Pandemic exceptions ended in June 2023.
- Current Status: With Estonia joining as the 23rd signatory, the agreement’s provisions apply from February 1, 2026, for Estonia.
Complex Cases
A common complexity arises when an employee holding an A1 certificate for cross-border telework needs to undertake business travel outside the two countries covered by the agreement (the country of residence and the employer’s country). The framework is designed for telework arrangements strictly between these two countries, and regular work in other countries is not permitted.
However, occasional, unplanned, short business trips to other countries may be tolerated under the framework. These trips should be infrequent and not part of a regular work pattern. Despite this informal acceptance, there is currently no legal clarity on how such business travel is assessed. It remains uncertain when these trips might jeopardize the validity of the A1 certificate for teleworking, lead to its cancellation or annulment, or result in the employee becoming ineligible for the framework agreement.