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Enhancing Public Accountability: Key Elements of the Public Office (Accountability) Bill 2025
Kirsty Cook
Now that your affairs have been structured effectively, attention turns to estate planning.
In this edition of the Roadmap, Joshua Moss sits down with Ed Johnson, Wealth Planner at London & Capital and Laura Harper, Partner at Kingsley Napley to discuss estate planning for international Americans.
Identifying your domicile position is an essential start point in mapping out your estate plan. This is because your domicile determines your exposure to taxes on your estate.
A key issue is that domicile is not a unified cross-border term i.e., how domicile is determined for US purposes is not the same in the UK. Being aware of these differences is essential and you should seek professional advice in establishing your domicile position.
It is fundamental that any planning is aligned with up-to-date Wills and Powers of Attorney to ensure that your best wishes are well considered. The situation becomes more complex for international families who might have different exposures to differing country laws based on their domicile.
For example, where married couples consist of a US person and a non-US person, having a properly drafted Will can be very important to preserve any exemptions or relief from tax, at least on the first death. For US persons leaving assets more than the Estate Duty exemption, this might contain a QDOT (Qualified Domestic Trust) trust which can delay the payment of tax on an estate until the death of the second spouse.
It is also important to consider that some US states have Community of property regimes so these may limit the powers of disposal of people who were married in these states.
Powers of attorney do not travel well at all so if you have assets in the US and the UK, you will need separate powers appointing attorneys to deal with these from a financial point of view.
By pulling together a global balance sheet of your family assets, this will determine your exposure to US and UK estate taxes at an asset level.
Important points to note during this exercise:
The significant contrast in allowances can explain the need for considered planning.
In the previous Roadmap Part 3 – Cashflow Modelling, we ran through an exercise in which you could visually understand how gifting assets can impact you, your family and/or future beneficiaries.
In summary, funds that are surplus to your immediate and future needs (within reason) should be available for estate planning.
Again, some important points to note during this exercise:
There are two main types of gifts:
This is as simple as it sounds where you gift away the asset and have no entitlement to use or benefit from it.
Trusts can be an efficient structure for passing wealth on to future generations tax efficiently. There are various types of trusts, which have different tax treatments in both the US and UK.
It can make sense to use one, but it should be carefully considered because the reporting and administrative burdens and costs can be substantive. It is also important to consider the location of beneficiaries of the trust because families are so mobile now. This can have tax and reporting implications for the trust and careful records need to be kept.
EPTs can be created at any time before settlor of the trust becomes deemed domiciled to protect their non-UK situs assets from being subject to UK IHT. When the settlor becomes deemed domiciled and subject to UK IHT on their worldwide estate, the assets in the trust will not be considered part of their estate. They may, however, be subject to other taxes such as income and capital gains if distributions from the trust are made to UK resident persons.
This can be desirable when balancing UK IHT protection with UK cash flow requirements and highlights the importance of considering everything in the round.
The US probate process is long and costly. For that reason, the use of revocable lifetime trusts is commonly adopted by US persons to avoid the probate process. However, holding UK situs assets in this type of trust often creates complications. As such, it can be much more efficient to have a UK will that works alongside a US revocable trust so that assets here can be administered quickly and more cost efficiently. It can also be helpful to appoint UK based executors, although this is not essential.
If you have a US probate trust and you are moving to the UK, the UK position needs to be reviewed and as Laura says: “this is particularly true for revocable trusts that have provisions for someone else to become trustee on the event on incapacity, because at this point what was considered a bare trust may become a substantive trust.”
This article was first published by London & Capital on 3rd November 2022.
If you would like any further information or advice about the topic discussed in this blog, please contact Laura Harper or our Private Client team.
Laura Harper is a partner in the Private Client team. She advises both UK resident and non-UK resident/domiciled individuals, families and trustees on a wide variety of UK tax, trust law and international estate planning issues, including the planning to be undertaken when moving to or from the UK. She also has extensive experience working on cross-border matters and structuring involving family-owned businesses.
We welcome views and opinions about the issues raised in this blog. Should you require specific advice in relation to personal circumstances, please use the form on the contact page.
Kirsty Cook
Waqar Shah
Dale Gibbons
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