Job Recruitment Website - Social security inquiry - My hometown has a social security card, and the company has a social security card.

My hometown has a social security card, and the company has a social security card.

Legal analysis: It is normal for a person to have multiple social security cards, because the social security system is not networked between different provinces. If you are insured in different provinces, there will be social security cards in different provinces. Or earlier, different cities in the same province are not connected to the internet, and there will be social security cards in different cities if you change your insurance coverage. There are two social security cards, which does not mean that both parties pay for insurance normally. Let's see if you participated in employee social security (paid by the employer) or just bought basic medical insurance for urban and rural residents (new rural cooperative medical system) before you came to your hometown. If you buy employee social security in your hometown, you can transfer it to the original insured place. If you buy the basic medical insurance for urban and rural residents in your hometown (the new rural cooperative medical system), you don't need to pay attention to it or handle any business. If the employer normally helps the insured to pay, it may not participate in the basic medical insurance for urban and rural residents.

According to Article 5 of the Measures for the Administration of Social Security Cards of the People's Republic of China, provincial human resources and social security departments or municipal human resources and social security departments may issue social security cards with the approval of Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security. No other institution or organization may issue social security cards.

Social security cards are constructed in accordance with the principle of "one card is multi-purpose and universal". The issuance of social security cards in all localities must comply with the requirements of safety, integrity and public welfare, adopt unified national standards and norms, and ensure their use throughout the country.