10–20 years in the GCC, done right, can fund a lifetime of financial security back home. Here is how to make every tax-free dirham count.
Three structural reasons why a nursing career in the Gulf accelerates your path to financial independence faster than almost anywhere else.
GCC countries levy zero personal income tax. A nurse earning AED 10,000/month keeps every dirham — no PAYE, no NI, no income tax deducted at source. Compare this to the UK where a similar salary would lose 32%+ in tax and National Insurance contributions.
Every GCC country mandates end-of-service gratuity — a legally required payout when you leave your employer. Think of it as a forced pension contribution paid entirely by your employer. After 10 years in the UAE, a nurse on AED 10,000 basic salary is entitled to approximately AED 108,000 in gratuity alone.
AED/SAR/QAR savings converted to PHP, INR, LKR or NPR go significantly further back home. A retirement fund of AED 500,000 (~USD 136,000) translates to approximately PHP 7.7 million — enough to generate comfortable retirement income in the Philippines for 20+ years.
The compound effect: Zero tax + gratuity + currency arbitrage creates a three-way multiplier effect. A disciplined GCC nurse can accumulate in 10 years what would take 25+ years in a high-tax Western country. The key is intentionality — knowing this advantage exists and actively using it.
Estimate your gratuity entitlement based on your country, salary and years of service. Remember: this is on top of everything you have saved.
Gratuity calculations are based on basic salary only and assume voluntary resignation after completing the stated period. Some countries reduce gratuity for early resignation. Always verify with your HR or a local labour lawyer. Currency conversions are approximate.
Working in the GCC does not mean abandoning your home country retirement benefits. Most countries allow voluntary contributions from abroad — and every year you miss is a year you cannot reclaim.
The Philippines has one of the most accessible voluntary overseas pension systems for OFWs.
Filipino nurses working abroad can contribute voluntarily as OFW members. Monthly contributions range from PHP 560 to PHP 4,560 depending on your declared monthly salary bracket (MSC). Higher contributions unlock higher pension benefits upon retirement. You can contribute monthly, quarterly or annually — even via online payment from the GCC.
SSS pension is calculated based on your Average Monthly Salary Credit (AMSC) and number of credited years of service. A nurse with 10 years of contributions averaging PHP 20,000 MSC can expect approximately PHP 5,000–8,000/month pension at age 60. Not life-changing on its own — but as a base combined with your GCC savings, it is meaningful supplementary income.
Pag-IBIG's Modified Pag-IBIG 2 (MP2) program offers an average dividend of 6–7% per year with a 5-year savings term. Minimum monthly contribution is PHP 500. For GCC nurses saving PHP 2,000/month for 5 years at 6.5% annual dividend, the accumulated fund reaches approximately PHP 144,000. Highly recommended as a low-risk PHP-denominated savings vehicle.
Register or update your SSS OFW membership online at sss.gov.ph. Set up SSS payment via GCash, PayMaya or direct bank transfer from your Philippine bank account. For Pag-IBIG, register at pagibigfund.gov.ph and set up MP2 savings. Consider authorizing a trusted family member as your payment proxy.
India offers multiple pension and savings vehicles accessible to NRIs working in the GCC.
NRIs can open and contribute to NPS (National Pension System) Tier I (pension) and Tier II (savings) accounts. Contributions are made in INR via NRE/NRO bank accounts. At maturity (age 60), 60% of the corpus can be withdrawn tax-free and 40% must be used to purchase an annuity. NPS historically returns 10–12% annually across equity and debt fund options.
If you had an EPF account before moving to the GCC, do not withdraw it prematurely. EPF earns a guaranteed 8.1–8.5% interest annually. Leave it to compound until age 58. However, if you have been out of India for over 3 years without contributions, the account may be classified as inoperative — transfer it to a new account or activate it online through the EPFO portal.
PPF accounts offer government-backed guaranteed returns (currently 7.1%), tax-free maturity proceeds, and a 15-year lock-in that forces long-term discipline. NRIs cannot open new PPF accounts, but if you had one before becoming an NRI, you can continue contributions until maturity. Maximum annual contribution is INR 1.5 lakh (~AED 6,500).
Open an NPS account via eNPS.nsdl.com using your Aadhaar and PAN. Maintain NRE and NRO bank accounts for INR-denominated investments. Contribute to PPF if existing account is active. Consider INR index funds via platforms like Groww or Zerodha using NRE account — Indian equities have returned 12–14% annually over the long term.
UK nurses in the GCC have excellent pension-building options, including filling National Insurance gaps cheaply.
To receive the full UK State Pension (currently £221.20/week = £11,502/year), you need 35 qualifying years of National Insurance contributions. Class 2 voluntary contributions for expats cost just £3.45/week (2024–25) — approximately AED 66/month. This is the cheapest pension top-up available anywhere. You can pay back years going back to 2006. Each year bought costs ~£180 but generates £295/year pension for life. A 30-year retirement = £8,850 return on £180 invested.
A SIPP allows you to invest in a wide range of assets (funds, ETFs, shares) within a pension wrapper. As a non-UK resident, you can still hold a SIPP but cannot make new tax-relievable contributions unless you have UK earnings. If you plan to return to the UK, a SIPP is a powerful vehicle — consider keeping an existing one invested rather than cashing it out.
QROPS allow you to transfer UK pension benefits abroad. Useful for nurses who do not plan to return to the UK. Seek specialist advice before proceeding — the rules are complex and HMRC applies a 25% overseas transfer charge if moving to most non-EEA jurisdictions. For nurses settled permanently in the GCC, this may be worth exploring.
Irish nurses in the GCC can continue building their Irish retirement entitlements through voluntary contributions.
A PRSA is a flexible, portable pension product that Irish nurses can contribute to even while abroad. Contributions can be made from overseas bank accounts. The Standard PRSA charges are capped by law (5% contribution charge, 1% annual management fee). You can invest in a range of funds. PRSA benefits are accessible from age 60 and are tax-free up to certain limits on drawdown.
Irish nurses can pay voluntary PRSI Class S contributions while working abroad to maintain Irish State Contributory Pension entitlement. The current Class S rate is 4% of gross income (minimum €500/year). The full Irish State Pension (contributory) is €277.30/week (2024) — requiring 40 years of contributions at the total contribution approach. Voluntary contributions help fill gaps.
When you eventually return to Ireland and resume Irish employment or self-employment, you can make Additional Voluntary Contributions (AVCs) to backfill pension savings. Tax relief on pension contributions is 40% for higher earners — meaning the government effectively contributes 40 cents for every 60 cents you put in.
US citizens and green card holders working in the GCC face unique considerations given the US taxes citizens on worldwide income.
US citizens can contribute to a Traditional or Roth IRA even while living abroad, provided they have earned income that exceeds the contribution (2024 limit: $7,000; $8,000 if over 50). However, if you use the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) to exclude your GCC income from US taxes, that excluded income does not count as earned income for IRA purposes. A non-excluded portion or Roth conversion strategy may be needed. Consult a US expat CPA.
If you worked in the US before moving to the GCC and paid Social Security taxes, you have built up Social Security credits. You need 40 credits (10 years of work) for retirement benefits. Your GCC employment does not add US Social Security credits unless you are self-employed and filing US taxes. If you fall short, you may be able to use voluntary coverage or return to US employment before retiring.
If you had a 401(k) from previous US employment: do not cash out early (10% penalty + income tax). Roll it over to an IRA for more investment flexibility. Leave it with your former employer if they allow it. The account continues to grow tax-deferred while you are in the GCC. Consider backdoor Roth conversions during years of lower US taxable income.
If your home country is not listed above, these principles apply universally to almost all expatriate pension situations.
Every country with a state pension system has a pension authority or social security agency. Search "[country name] voluntary pension contributions abroad" or "OFW/overseas worker pension [country]". Most have provisions for voluntary contributions from overseas — often at reduced rates.
If you contributed to a home country pension before moving, do not let those records lapse. Notify your pension authority of your new address. Some countries freeze inactive accounts or require periodic confirmation of continued entitlement.
If your home country has limited voluntary overseas pension options, consider home country private pension products (unit-linked funds, endowment plans, private pension schemes). Invest in home currency to avoid currency risk on future retirement income. Local life insurance companies often offer pension-like savings products suitable for OFWs.
For nurses from countries with limited state pension provision, your GCC savings and investments become your primary retirement asset. Prioritise building a diversified portfolio: international ETFs, home country property, gold, and a local emergency fund in home currency.
A realistic roadmap for every stage of your GCC career — from your first year settling in to a confident return home with a fully funded retirement.
Your first two years are about orientation, not aggressive wealth-building. The priority is establishing financial stability in an unfamiliar environment.
By year 3 you have found your footing. Now compound interest needs to start working for you. Every month of delay at this stage costs you dearly in the long run.
Year 5 is the first natural decision checkpoint. Your gratuity vesting schedule changes (in most GCC countries the calculation improves after 5 years), and you have enough financial data to make an informed decision.
This is where the real magic happens. Your investments from years 3–5 have been growing for 4–7 years. Your salary has likely increased through career progression. Your gratuity pot is now substantial.
After 10 years of GCC earnings, you should have the down payment — or full purchase price — for property back home. This is your single most important retirement asset: a paid-off home means near-zero housing costs in retirement.
By year 15–20, your GCC career has delivered extraordinary financial results if you have been disciplined. Now the focus shifts from accumulation to transition — how and when do you go home, and how do you make your money last?
No capital gains tax. No income tax. The GCC is one of the world's best places to grow an investment portfolio. Here is where to put your money. For a full deep-dive, see the complete GCC Nurse Investing Guide.
The single best wealth-building tool for most GCC nurses. S&P 500, MSCI World, or Vanguard All-World ETFs offer instant global diversification. Historical returns: 8–12% annually. Accessible via eToro, Interactive Brokers, or Saxo Bank from the GCC.
A paid-off home in your home country is arguably the most important retirement investment you can make. It eliminates housing costs in retirement and provides a physical asset that tends to hold value in local currency terms. Buy with cash if possible — avoid large mortgages late in your GCC career.
Dubai's freehold property zones allow foreign nationals to own property outright. Off-plan apartments in areas like JVC, Dubai South, and Arjan offer entry prices from AED 500,000. Rental yields of 6–9% make Dubai one of the world's top property investment markets. Useful if you plan to stay in the region long-term.
Gold is a traditional store of value favoured by GCC nurses from South Asia and Southeast Asia. Dubai's gold souk offers competitive prices for physical gold. Digital gold via platforms like Sarwa or international gold ETFs (GLD, IAU) offer liquidity without storage concerns. Aim for 5–15% of portfolio maximum.
Investing in your home country stock market hedges against currency risk on your retirement spending. Philippine PSEi, Indian NSE/BSE Nifty, or UK FTSE 100 exposure means your portfolio rises when your home currency strengthens — exactly the time you want money to retire. Accessible via local brokers or NRI/OFW-friendly platforms.
For your emergency fund and short-term savings (1–3 years), GCC bank fixed deposits offer 3–5% interest annually with capital protection. UAE banks like Emirates NBD, ADCB, and Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank offer competitive rates for GCC residents. Better than leaving cash in a current account.
Zero capital gains tax reminder: As a GCC resident, you pay no capital gains tax on investment profits regardless of the amount. A GCC nurse who turns AED 100,000 into AED 500,000 through index funds owes zero tax on the AED 400,000 gain — a benefit unavailable in the UK, USA, India or most other countries. Use this window aggressively.
Three retirement saving scenarios based on a nurse earning AED 10,000/month total package. The difference between scenarios is not talent or luck — it is habit and intention.
A baseline target anyone can achieve. Enough for family remittances plus disciplined investing.
At 8% annual return on invested portion: ~AED 520,000 total
The recommended target for nurses serious about retiring comfortably within 15 years.
At 8% annual return on invested portion: ~AED 700,000 total
For nurses with minimal family obligations or dual-income households. Retire in 10 years.
At 8% annual return on invested portion: ~AED 960,000 total
Add your gratuity entitlement on top of all three scenarios. A nurse on AED 8,000 basic salary working 10 years in the UAE receives approximately AED 90,000–108,000 in gratuity. Combined with the balanced scenario above, total retirement assets at year 10 reach AED 790,000–808,000 (approximately USD 215,000 or PHP 43 million). This is genuinely life-changing money in most nurses' home countries.
One of the most important and emotionally complex decisions a GCC nurse will make. Financial readiness is only part of the answer.
Property secured at home — you own or have the funds to buy a home outright. Housing costs in retirement should be near zero.
Children's education fully funded — if you have children, their education costs through university are covered by a dedicated fund.
Emergency fund in home currency — 12 months of expenses in a local bank account. Separate from your investment portfolio.
Monthly income from investments > monthly expenses — your portfolio should generate passive income exceeding your retirement budget. The 4% rule suggests a portfolio of 25x annual expenses is sufficient.
Health insurance or healthcare fund — state healthcare may not be sufficient. A dedicated healthcare reserve of 3–5 years of estimated costs gives you buffer.
Pension income confirmed — SSS, NPS, UK State Pension or equivalent pension income confirmed and starting within a defined timeframe.
Will and estate documents in place — GCC-held assets, home country property and investment accounts all covered by current legal documents.
The most common financial regret. Nurses who leave at year 5–7, before serious wealth accumulation, often find they cannot maintain their lifestyle at home and must return to the GCC or take lower-paying nursing work locally. The last 5 years of a GCC career often generate more wealth than the first 10 combined, due to salary growth, compound investment returns, and enhanced gratuity rates.
A different kind of regret. Nurses who stay 20+ years sometimes return to find their home country feels foreign, their social network has moved on, and their children are now fully GCC-raised adults. The GCC golden handcuffs are real — every additional year increases gratuity and salary, making it psychologically harder to leave. Set a firm date and honour it.
After years of GCC infrastructure, efficiency, and expat community life, returning home can be jarring. Traffic, bureaucracy, slower pace, and social dynamics will feel different. Visit home annually in the final years of your GCC career. Reconnect with local community. Have a purpose — charity, mentoring, part-time consulting. Retirement without purpose leads to regret regardless of wealth.
Eight costly mistakes that derail GCC nurses' retirement plans — and how to avoid each one.
Sending 80–90% of salary home to support family leaves nothing to compound and grow. Remittances are important, but a nurse who supports family for 15 years without building personal wealth has a retirement crisis waiting.
Every year abroad without voluntary SSS/NPS/NI contributions is a year of pension benefit permanently lost. The cost of voluntary contributions is minimal compared to the lifetime pension income you receive.
Putting all retirement savings into one property, one stock, or one currency is concentration risk. If that investment fails, your retirement fails. Diversification across asset classes, geographies and currencies is non-negotiable.
Luxury car leases, premium apartments, frequent dining out, designer goods — the GCC makes it easy to spend every dirham you earn. Many nurses earn AED 15,000+/month but save less than AED 1,000. Income is not wealth; savings rate is what builds wealth.
Saving in AED while planning to retire in PHP or INR exposes you to currency fluctuation risk. AED/PHP has been relatively stable, but a 20% currency shift in either direction materially changes your retirement purchasing power.
Dying without a will in the GCC is extremely complicated. UAE applies Sharia inheritance law to intestate (no-will) estates by default, which may differ dramatically from your intentions. GCC assets, home country property and investment accounts all need clear legal documentation.
Gratuity is excellent free money, but it is not enough alone. A nurse retiring after 15 UAE years on AED 10,000 basic salary receives approximately AED 150,000 in gratuity — significant, but not a retirement fund by itself. It should be one component of a diversified portfolio.
Healthcare costs in retirement are significant and easy to underestimate. State healthcare in many home countries is under-resourced. Without a healthcare fund or insurance, a single serious illness can wipe out years of savings.
14 action items every GCC nurse should complete. Progress is saved to your browser automatically.
Keep in a GCC savings account or fixed deposit — do not invest this portion
Register as an OFW/NRI member or voluntary contributor
Set up standing order or recurring payment to home country pension
Complete KYC, fund with initial deposit and buy first ETF
Minimum 30% recommended — automate the transfer so it is non-negotiable
Calculate your current gratuity entitlement each year and document it
A paid-off home is the single most important retirement asset
Cover GCC-held assets AND home country assets — update annually
Ensure your family is protected if something happens to you in the GCC
Use the 4% rule: target fund = annual retirement expenses × 25
Visit home annually in your final GCC years to ease reintegration
Write it down. Tell someone. Review annually but commit to a direction
Understand what is covered by state health, what you need to fund privately
Seek an advisor who charges a flat fee or hourly rate — not commission-based
The GCC is tax-free while you work here — but what happens when you return home? Understanding repatriation taxes before you leave is essential.
OFW income earned abroad is exempt from Philippine income tax under the NIRC. Your GCC salary is fully exempt while you are classified as an OFW. Remittances sent to the Philippines are also generally not subject to Philippine income tax.
Once you return to the Philippines and become a resident taxpayer, investment income (dividends, interest, capital gains on shares) becomes taxable. Philippine capital gains tax on shares sold outside the PSE is 15% of net capital gain. Dividends from domestic corporations are taxed at 10%. Foreign-sourced income of resident Filipino citizens is subject to Philippine income tax at progressive rates.
There is no Philippine tax on the capital you transfer home — only on income earned after you resume Philippine residency. Large remittances above USD 10,000 may trigger BSP reporting requirements but are not themselves taxable. Keep records of your GCC savings to distinguish capital from investment returns if ever queried.
SSS pension benefits are exempt from income tax under RA 4917. Pag-IBIG (HDMF) savings and dividends are also tax-exempt. Your home country pension income is therefore tax-free, while your investment portfolio income is taxable — an important distinction for retirement income planning.
When you return to India after a long absence abroad, you qualify as Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR) for 2–3 years. During this period, only India-sourced income is taxable — foreign income (including GCC investment returns) remains exempt. This is a critical window to repatriate and restructure your portfolio before full Indian tax residency applies.
Funds in NRE (Non-Resident External) accounts are fully repatriable and interest earned is tax-free while you are NRI. On becoming a resident, NRE account interest becomes taxable, but the principal and previously accumulated interest remain exempt. NRO account interest has always been taxable in India but subject to TDS.
Indian equity investments (mutual funds, stocks) are subject to capital gains tax: STCG at 20% (holdings under 1 year) and LTCG at 12.5% above INR 1.25 lakh annually (holdings over 1 year). Foreign equity investments (ETFs held abroad) sold after becoming resident may be taxable as foreign income under India-GCC DTAA provisions.
India has DTAAs with UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman. These prevent the same income from being taxed twice. However, since GCC countries impose zero tax, the DTAA primarily helps with definitions of residency and sourcing rules rather than providing tax credits.
UK tax residency is determined by the Statutory Residence Test (SRT). Spending 183+ days in the UK in a tax year makes you automatically UK resident. From that point, your worldwide income — including GCC investment returns and pension income — becomes subject to UK income tax at 20–45% depending on amount.
When you return to the UK, you can contribute up to £20,000/year into an ISA (Individual Savings Account) — all growth and income is permanently tax-free. In the early years of return, maximise ISA contributions by transferring GCC cash savings into ISA wrappers. Stocks and Shares ISA is ideal for long-term investment growth.
Investments held in foreign accounts (eToro, Interactive Brokers) are subject to UK capital gains tax on gains accrued after UK residency begins. Gains accrued while non-resident (living in GCC) may be exempt under transitional rules. Seek specialist UK expat tax advice before returning to plan the optimal timing of asset sales and transfers.
UK State Pension is taxable income but usually falls within the Personal Allowance (£12,570 in 2024–25), especially if it is your sole income. A full State Pension of £11,502/year means zero income tax for most retirees. However, combined with investment income or occupational pension, it may push you into the 20% tax band.
You are Irish tax resident if you spend 183+ days in Ireland in a tax year, or 280+ days combined over two consecutive years. From the date of return, Irish-sourced income is immediately taxable. Foreign income (GCC investments, pension) becomes taxable from the date you become ordinarily resident (typically after 3 years of Irish residency).
Irish CGT is 33% on investment gains — one of the highest in Europe. Unlike the UK's ISA, Ireland has no equivalent tax-free investment wrapper for most ETF investors. Irish residents investing in ETFs face a deemed disposal rule (taxed every 8 years even without selling). Plan your investment structure carefully before returning.
Pension contributions receive income tax relief at your marginal rate (20% or 40%). Pension lump sums at retirement are tax-free up to €200,000. State pension (contributory) income is subject to income tax but typically falls within personal tax credits for most retirees.
There is no Irish gift or inheritance tax on money you transfer to yourself from GCC savings. However, Revenue Ireland may query the source of large inward transfers. Maintain complete records of your GCC payslips, bank statements and investment account statements to document the source of funds.
Unlike all other nationalities in this guide, US citizens are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where they live. Your GCC salary may be partially or fully excluded via the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE — up to $126,500 in 2024), but investment income, dividends and capital gains are always reportable to the IRS.
FinCEN FBAR filing is required if the aggregate value of foreign accounts exceeds $10,000 at any point during the year. FATCA Form 8938 is required for higher thresholds. Penalties for non-compliance are severe ($10,000+). This is not optional. File every year while in the GCC regardless of whether you owe US tax.
On returning to the US, your GCC investment accounts become subject to full US taxation on gains and income. Roth IRA conversions done in low-US-income years (while in GCC) are especially valuable — you pay tax at a low rate now and withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. Consider Roth conversion ladder strategy during GCC years.
GCC employment does not contribute to US Social Security. If you have under 40 credits (10 years of US work), you will not receive US retirement benefits. Check your Social Security statement at ssa.gov. If you fall short, consider returning to US employment for the remaining years needed before retirement.
Honest answers to the most important retirement planning questions from GCC nurses.
Yes — end-of-service gratuity is a legal entitlement enshrined in labour law in all six GCC countries. It is not discretionary. Employers who fail to pay gratuity upon termination are in breach of labour law and can be reported to the relevant labour ministry. In the UAE, you can file a complaint with the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MoHRE). In Saudi Arabia, complaints go to the Ministry of Human Resources. The process works — GCC labour courts generally rule in favour of employees in clear-cut gratuity disputes.
Important caveat: gratuity may be reduced or forfeited if you are dismissed for gross misconduct (as specified in labour law). Voluntary resignation before completing 1 year of service typically results in zero gratuity in most GCC countries. Always read your specific country's labour law provisions.
The rules vary by country, but the general principle across the GCC is:
The 2022 UAE Labour Law amendments improved protections significantly. Under the new unlimited contract rules, gratuity is payable in full regardless of who initiates the termination, provided the employee has completed at least 1 year of service. Always consult the specific law applicable in your country of employment.
It depends on your home country's pension rules, but in most cases:
The practical question is whether it is worth drawing a small pension early while you continue GCC work income, or deferring it for a larger benefit. Deferring UK State Pension beyond retirement age increases the payment by approximately 1% for every 9 weeks deferred.
Yes — gratuity is calculated per employment, not per lifetime in the GCC. If you work 5 years in UAE and then 5 years in Qatar, you receive UAE gratuity when you leave your UAE employer and Qatar gratuity when you leave your Qatar employer. They do not combine or transfer.
Key implications:
In practice, nurses who switch GCC countries frequently accumulate smaller gratuity amounts from multiple employers. Stability in one country typically yields larger total gratuity.
Dubai property can be an excellent investment under the right conditions — but it is not automatically the right choice for every GCC nurse.
Arguments in favour:
Arguments against for most GCC nurses:
Bottom line: Dubai property makes most sense for nurses who plan to stay in the GCC long-term, have home country housing already secured, and have sufficient capital to buy without over-leveraging.
Transferring large retirement savings home requires planning to minimise fees, avoid regulatory issues, and time exchange rates effectively.
For the vast majority of GCC nurses, retiring in the GCC is not a viable option. GCC residency is linked to employment — when you stop working, your visa expires (typically within 30 days) and you must leave. There are some exceptions:
For most nurses, the answer is to retire at home. The financial case is compelling: lower cost of living, existing social networks, family proximity, and home country pension income all combine to make home retirement more comfortable and more economical. The GCC is the engine that funds it — your home country is where you enjoy it.
The right target depends on your home country, lifestyle expectations and retirement age. Here are realistic benchmarks:
Use the 4% rule as a starting point: multiply your desired annual retirement income by 25 to get your target portfolio size. For example, if you need PHP 480,000/year (PHP 40,000/month), you need PHP 12 million in investable assets. This is achievable for a nurse who saves and invests disciplinedly throughout a 10–15 year GCC career.
Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax or legal advice. Pension rules, tax laws and gratuity regulations change frequently. Always verify current rules with official government sources and consult a qualified financial advisor, preferably one with expat and cross-border specialisation. GCCNurseJobs.com is not responsible for financial decisions made based on this content.