MP Estate Planning UK

Estate Planning for Returning UK Expats

estate planning for uk expats returning home uk

We help families make sensible choices when they move back. This guide explains what “estate planning for uk expats returning home uk” means in 2025–2027 and why a return can create unexpected tax and legal risk.

Moving country changes the rules. Cross-border inheritance, shifts in residency tests and new pensions rules from April 2027 complicate the process. We set out a clear map, not legal advice, to help homeowners aged 45–75 spot the main decisions.

We explain the three pillars of a complete plan — distribution, tax and governance — so you can see what good looks like before the detail. Your portfolio may include more than a house: bank accounts, investments, business shares, life policies, pensions and overseas assets.

Through simple examples, like a Spanish holiday home or a French flat, we make cross-border succession and double taxation easier to follow. We also flag when specialist advice is sensible, particularly where timing, residency or trusts could change outcomes for your family.

Key Takeaways

  • Returning residents face new tax and succession rules; act early.
  • Focus on three pillars: distribution, tax and governance.
  • Your portfolio can include pensions, insurance and overseas holdings.
  • Simple examples make cross-border issues easier to understand.
  • Get specialist advice when residency, timing or trusts affect outcomes.

Why returning to the UK changes your estate planning priorities

When you come back, small events—like buying a house or starting work—can trigger big fiscal and legal shifts. We guide you through the common moments that alter tax exposure and compliance duties so you can act before problems arise.

tax residency

Common triggers that create risk

  • Buying a residence in Britain or selling overseas property.
  • Restarting UK employment or pension income.
  • Children moving to local schools or closing foreign accommodation.

What can go wrong without a cross-border plan

Tax residency is often the first domino. A change in residency status can alter what income and gains are taxable and what HMRC expects you to report. That single shift explains many tax implications.

Compliance issues usually start small: missing paperwork, unclear dates, and careless assumptions. Without a cross-border approach you face conflicting wills, slow probate across jurisdictions and beneficiaries left waiting.

Double taxation can also appear where foreign death duties overlap UK rules. A simple annual review of documents helps keep pace with life changes and reduces unexpected costs.

Confirming your UK tax residency on return

Confirming your tax residency early can cut confusion and cost. We explain the Statutory Residence Test in plain terms and show the documents HMRC commonly asks for.

tax residency

How the Statutory Residence Test works in practice

The SRT uses day counts and UK ties to decide residency. If you spend 183 days or more in the UK you are usually resident. Fewer than 16 days often means non-resident. Between 16 and 182 days depends on ties such as family, accommodation, work and prior UK history.

Split-year treatment and why timing matters

Split-year treatment can separate your return year into a non-UK and a UK part. That may reduce tax in the transition year, but only if you meet specific conditions. Small shifts in arrival dates can change outcomes.

Record-keeping HMRC may expect after you move

Keep a simple travel log and proof: boarding passes, tenancy or mortgage paperwork, employment start dates and school enrolment. These items help show when you became resident and protect against disputes later.

  • Tip: Keep dates and receipts together—executors will thank you.
  • Tip: A clear record supports fair tax reporting and smoother administration.
Days in UKLikely ResultKey Evidence
183+ResidentEntry/exit stamps, accommodation
16 or fewerNon‑residentTravel logs, overseas ties
16–182Depends on tiesFamily, work, prior UK days

For a practical checklist as you plan the move, see our moving back checklist. Getting residency right helps protect income, gains and longer-term IHT exposure.

How UK inheritance tax works in the UK today

A clear threshold-and-rate model makes it simple to spot when inheritance tax bites and when it does not. We set out the headline numbers so you can estimate exposure quickly and plan next steps.

inheritance tax

The 40% rate and the £325,000 nil‑rate band

In plain terms, the system uses an allowance and a rate. Most estates pay 40% on value above the £325,000 nil‑rate band.

That threshold is the starting point. If your total assets pass it, the excess faces the 40% charge before any reliefs.

When the allowance can rise to £500,000 for a family home

If a main property passes to your children (including adopted, step and foster) the nil‑rate band can increase to £500,000.

There are conditions and timing rules to meet. A careless transfer or the wrong ownership mix can trip people up.

Spouse, civil partner and charity exemptions

Transfers between spouses and civil partners are generally exempt from inheritance tax. That rule is powerful but not a complete solution if you want to protect other beneficiaries later.

Charitable gifts can also reduce liability. Leave at least 10% of your net estate to charity and the tax rate on the remainder can drop to 36% — a useful option where values and wishes align.

“We recommend reviewing allowances every few years to reflect changing values, property prices and residency rules.”

RuleThreshold or RateTypical effect
Nil‑rate band£325,000First slice free of tax
Main residence additionUp to £500,000When passed to children
Charity gift10%+ net estateRate reduces to 36%
  • Tip: Residency and long‑term status in recent years can affect whether overseas assets count towards the total tax bill.
  • Tip: A quick estimate using these thresholds shows whether you need detailed advice.

Long-Term Residence rules from April 2025 and what they mean for expats

From 6 April 2025 the rules moved the focus from historic domicile to where someone has been resident. That change means many people who were once overseas can now face UK tax on their worldwide assets if they meet the long‑term resident test.

long term residence status

The 10 out of 20 years test

Long‑term resident (LTR) status applies if you were UK tax resident in at least 10 of the previous 20 tax years. Think of it as a simple timeline: ten checked boxes in the last twenty puts you inside the rule.

This can happen faster than people expect. A few returns to the UK over a decade may tick the 10‑year count and change tax status.

Worldwide assets exposure and the residence “tail”

If you become an LTR, the UK can tax worldwide assets on death. That covers property, overseas investments, bank accounts and business interests.

Leaving again does not remove the risk immediately. A residence “tail” can continue exposure for between three and ten years depending on your prior years of residence.

Who may fall outside the new regime — and why it matters

Some people fall outside the rules. For example, certain non‑residents in 2025/26 or those meeting specific guidance conditions escape worldwide IHT. That difference can change whether trusts and gifts are effective.

“We recommend reviewing your residence history now. Small timing changes can change long‑term tax consequences.”

  • Action: Map your last 20 tax years against UK residency.
  • Action: List worldwide assets so you can see exposure.
  • Action: Seek specialist advice early where the tail or trusts might apply.

For more on cross‑border issues and how assets overseas are treated, see our guide on estate planning for UK expats with assets.

Mapping your estate: UK assets vs overseas assets

Start by sketching a one-page map that separates domestic holdings from foreign ones. That view drives most decisions and shows what sits inside UK tax reach and what may not.

assets

Understanding UK-situs items and when only they are taxed

UK-situs means assets that are treated as located in Britain for tax purposes. If you are treated as based abroad, typically only these assets face UK IHT. This distinction can reduce exposure but depends on residency history.

Common asset types and how they behave

  • Property (UK and overseas) — often slow to administer and may need local probate.
  • Bank accounts and cash — UK accounts are easy; foreign currency accounts can sit outside IHT in some cases.
  • Investments and funds — open-ended funds can be non‑situs; private company shares are slower.
  • Pensions — many overseas pensions sit outside UK IHT, but residency history can change that.
  • Insurance, business interests and income streams — gather policy numbers and ownership details now.
Asset typeSitus (typical)Admin speedCommon evidence
Residential propertyWhere it is locatedSlowTitle deeds, local probate
Bank accounts (foreign)Often non‑situsFastStatements, account numbers
Open‑ended fundsMay be non‑situsMediumFund certificates, ISIN
PensionsOften outside IHTVariesPolicy numbers, trustee details

Action: build your one‑page map now and keep statements together. Good asset management today prevents executor confusion and helps protect value for beneficiaries.

estate planning for uk expats returning home uk: what a complete plan includes

Good preparation ties who receives assets, how taxes apply and who will act if you cannot into a single playbook.

estate planning for uk expats returning home uk

Distribution: who inherits what, when and how

Decide who gets what, and whether gifts are outright or staged. Think about children from earlier relationships and vulnerable beneficiaries.

Practical prompts: list beneficiaries, set ages or milestones for access, and name guardians or protectors where needed.

Tax: inheritance tax, income tax and capital gains considerations

Look at three lenses: inheritance tax, income tax and capital gains tax. Each can be triggered at different times.

Tip: match actions to timing — a lifetime gift, a sale or a pension nomination can create different tax results.

Governance: executors, attorneys and trustees

Choose clear executors, lasting powers of attorney and trustees. Good governance speeds administration and avoids family rows.

When to get advice: if you have overseas property, blended families, high‑value pensions or trusts, specialist advice usually pays for itself.

AreaTypical toolsKey questionWhen to seek advice
DistributionWill, beneficiary listsWho gets what and when?Blended families or vulnerable heirs
TaxLifetime gifts, trusts, nominationsHow much tax may be due?High values, overseas assets or LTR status
GovernanceExecutors, LPAs, trusteesWho will act and how?Complex assets or distant heirs

Wills for returning expats: getting the foundations right

A clear will is the simplest way to make your final wishes count where laws cross borders.

Why intestacy can override your wishes

Without a valid will, statutory rules decide who inherits. That often excludes friends or non‑married partners and can be harsh in second marriages.

Single will versus separate wills

One will can cover all assets, but separate wills — one for domestic property and one for foreign holdings — often speed administration and cut translation delays.

Be careful: a new UK will can unintentionally revoke an older foreign will. Specialist drafting avoids that conflict.

Choosing executors for cross-border cases

Appoint a trusted executor who can act where assets sit. Family members work well for simple cases.

For complex, multi-jurisdictional assets, consider professional services such as a solicitor or trustee firm.

IssueBenefitWhen to choose
Single willSimpler recordMostly UK assets
Separate willsFaster local probateSignificant foreign property
Professional executorHandles cross‑border tasksComplex assets or distant heirs

What executors need now: an asset list, key contacts, policy numbers and a short digital access plan. This makes the process kinder and quicker for your beneficiaries.

Probate and estate administration in the UK

A grant of probate gives executors authority to deal with accounts, investments and property that do not pass automatically.

When a grant of probate is likely to be needed

We usually need a grant when there are multiple accounts, significant investments or a house in the name of the deceased.

Higher value or complex portfolios almost always trigger the process. Banks and platforms often insist on the court authorisation before releasing funds.

When probate may not be required for jointly held assets

Some assets pass by survivorship. Joint tenants in property or co‑owned cash and shares can transfer automatically to the survivor.

Important: joint ownership must match your wider wishes. Otherwise it can frustrate good management and create family issues later.

How probate delays can compound overseas issues

Delays cost time and value. Foreign registries may ask for certified translations, apostilles or local court papers on top of UK probate.

Good administration starts before death. A tidy file with titles, account numbers and adviser contacts can save months.

AreaTypical needPractical action
UK bank accountsProbate if sole namedList accounts and online logins
Joint assetsNo probate if joint tenantCheck ownership form and beneficiary rules
Overseas propertyOften needs local stepsGather title deeds and translator contact

Quick checklist for executors: where key documents are stored, adviser names, immediate bills to pay and a simple contact list.

Lasting power of attorney and incapacity planning

Deciding who will look after your finances and health before you need them avoids chaos later. A lasting power of attorney (LPA) lets a trusted person act for you if you lose capacity.

Why incapacity planning matters: illness often brings urgent choices about care, bills and property. Without an LPA, families can face legal delay and higher costs. Acting early gives peace of mind.

Health and welfare decisions

This LPA covers medical treatment, care location and daily care choices. Attorneys must follow your wishes and act in your best interests.

Property and financial affairs authority

This covers bank accounts, bills, pensions and property management. You can allow it to be used while you still have capacity if you wish.

Registration and when your attorneys can act

An LPA must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian before it can be used. Registration delays can leave families unable to manage urgent matters.

  • Choosing attorneys: pick people who match your needs, can handle paperwork and live where they can act quickly.
  • Protection: an LPA stops the wrong person stepping in and shields family members from blocked accounts or unpaid care fees.
  • Cross-border note: if you have overseas accounts or property, check how local rules affect attorney authority and management.
IssueResultPractical step
Health decisionsAttorneys act when neededDraft health LPA
Financial affairsMoney and property managedRegister P&FA LPA
TimingDelays limit useRegister early

We recommend combining LPAs with your will and wider plans. For further estate planning guidance and tailored services, seek trusted professional advice to match your family’s needs.

Cross-border succession issues and forced heirship rules

Local succession laws can override a will made elsewhere and leave families surprised.

In some countries, including France, Spain and the UAE, forced heirship reserves a share of your inheritance for close relatives. That means parts of your assets can pass automatically, no matter what your will says. This can affect property ownership and who receives cash or investments.

How forced heirship can affect your wishes

Forced heirship often protects children or a spouse. In practice, it may limit how you distribute property and other assets.

For example, a Spanish or French holiday property may fall under local rules that reserve a portion for descendants. In the UAE, different personal law systems can apply depending on nationality and residence.

Overseas property and local succession law

Real estate is usually governed by the law where the property stands. That can mean separate procedures and different outcomes from UK documents.

Reducing conflict between documents

Two sets of documents that contradict each other create delay, cost and family tension. To reduce that risk:

  • Align definitions: ensure beneficiaries are named consistently across wills and nominations.
  • Avoid revocation traps: drafting must not unintentionally cancel a foreign will.
  • Get local advice: ask advisers in each country to read the full picture.

“When assets sit in more than one country, early cross‑border advice is the most effective way to prevent conflict.”

IssueEffect abroadPractical step
Forced heirshipCertain relatives must inheritCheck local rules and adjust wills
Property situsLocal law governs successionConsider a separate local will
Contradictory documentsDelays and legal disputesAlign language and seek cross‑border review

When your circumstances include children from different relationships or multiple properties, we recommend seeking specialist cross‑border legal advice. For more on owning property abroad and how overseas inheritance tax rules can affect your wider plan, see our guide on owning property abroad.

Double taxation and treaty relief for international estates

Cross-border inheritances can trigger charges in more than one country and, without care, leave heirs facing duplicate bills. We explain how and when this happens and what can reduce the burden.

When both countries can tax the same inheritance

Double taxation occurs when two jurisdictions claim the same asset as within their reach. A UK resident who still holds foreign property is a common example.

Practical implication: you may pay local levies first, then face a secondary claim unless relief applies.

Using double taxation agreements to offset liabilities

Double taxation agreements (DTAs) often allow local tax to be credited against a UK charge. Claiming relief needs the right receipts, valuations and certified translations.

Keep records: local tax receipts, official valuations and dates. Executors must produce these to obtain offsets.

Examples and why planning differs by jurisdiction

CountryTypical top rateNote
GermanyUp to 50%Progressive, spouse/child allowances vary
SpainUp to 34%Regional rules affect relief
FranceUp to 60%High rates for distant heirs

“We recommend early, specialist advice. Treaties differ and paperwork matters.”

In short, double taxation is real but manageable. Seek focused cross-border tax advice early to protect beneficiaries and speed administration.

Inheritance tax planning strategies for returning expats

Timing matters: gifts made today can change the tax picture years from now.

We start with gifting because it is simple and transparent. If you survive seven years after a gift it may escape inheritance tax. Keep clear records so executors can report transfers correctly.

Gifts and exemptions

The annual allowance lets you give £3,000 each tax year. You can carry forward one unused year once. Small yearly gifts add up and reduce the taxable pool over time.

Taper relief and the seven‑year rule

Gifts made three to seven years before death may qualify for taper relief. Taper lowers the tax due, but it does not reduce the value transferred.

Trusts and excluded property

Trusts can protect beneficiaries and control how assets pass. They also bring extra reporting and periodic charges.

ToolBenefitWhen to use
Lifetime giftsClear transfer if survive 7 yearsWhen you can give away assets
Annual allowanceTax-free yearly transferRegular small gifts
Discretionary trustControl for beneficiariesProtect vulnerable heirs
Excluded property trustMay keep overseas assets outside chargeNon-LTR status; review if LTR changes

“Review any trust or gifting step before a move. Long‑term resident status can change outcomes.”

For a practical how-to on gifting, see our gift guide.

Pensions, death benefits and the April 2027 inheritance tax change

Pension pots and death benefits can reshape a family’s tax picture in ways many do not expect.

Why pensions have often sat outside the estate

Historically most pensions were outside the probate pool. Nomination forms and scheme rules let trustees pay beneficiaries directly.

Keep nominations up to date. A form aligns payouts with your wider wishes and avoids unintended consequences.

Death before and after age 75

If death occurs before age 75 beneficiaries can often receive pension funds tax-free, up to the Lifetime Small Defined Benefit Amount (£1,073,100).

After 75, withdrawals are taxed at the recipient’s marginal income tax rate. That difference changes cashflow and inheritance implications.

What changes from 6 April 2027

From 6 April 2027 most unused DC and DB pensions are expected to be included in the inheritance tax net at 40% above allowances. Scheme administrators may need to report and pay within 60 days of death. Transfers between spouses remain exempt.

Practical steps to consider

  • Review pension wrappers and nomination forms now.
  • Stress-test whether pensions move into the tax net and how that affects your wider plan.
  • Check overseas pension treatment if you have foreign schemes; residency can change implications.

“Update nominations and model outcomes before April 2027 to protect beneficiaries and reduce administration risk.”

Repatriation timeline: what to do before, during and after your move

A staged checklist helps you focus on the actions that protect value and reduce delay.

Six to twelve months before

Confirm residency tests and consider split‑year treatment. Review offshore investments and bank accounts.

Audit pensions, including QROPS or consolidation into a UK SIPP where that suits your wider financial plan.

Three to six months before

Arrange UK banking and rebuild credit by joining the electoral roll. Check insurance and gather property and mortgage documents.

On arrival and the first 90 days

Notify HMRC where needed, register NI and update your payroll code. Keep travel and arrival evidence.

Quick wins: use the £20,000 ISA allowance and restart pension contributions to reduce near‑term tax exposure.

Within the first year

Align investments, wills and beneficiary nominations so everything works together. Reassess trusts and watch cross‑border tax and compliance risks.

When to book free consultation

Book free consultation if you have overseas property, complex pensions, trusts or unclear residency history. A short meeting can quantify risk and set priorities.

“A timely review cuts uncertainty and helps you protect what matters most.”

TimelineKey actionsWhy it mattersWhen to consult
6–12 monthsResidency check, pension audit, asset reviewDetermines tax reach and transfer optionsIf you have multi‑jurisdiction pensions or high value assets
3–6 monthsBank setup, insurance, property docsSmooths access and reduces last‑minute stressIf mortgage or local registrations are needed
0–90 daysHMRC notifications, NI, evidence logsBuilds compliance and avoids enquiriesWhen residency dates or payroll status are unclear
Within 12 monthsAlign investments, wills, nominationsMakes your plan work as one systemBook free consultation if trusts or double tax risks exist

Conclusion

Small, well-timed steps today can protect more of your assets and make administration easier later.

Returning may change your exposure to inheritance tax and reporting duties. Start with four simple tools: an updated will, named executors, registered lasting powers of attorney and a clear map of UK and overseas assets.

Remember: the April 2025 long-term residence rules and the April 2027 pensions change can alter outcomes. Keep nominations current and review documents regularly.

Take a calm, step-by-step approach: confirm residency, identify what is taxable, then choose the right tools — gifts, trusts where suitable, and robust governance. Where multiple jurisdictions or higher values exist, seek specialist advice early to protect your family and preserve value.

FAQ

Why does returning to the UK change my estate planning priorities?

Your tax and legal position can shift quickly when you become UK resident again. Rules on inheritance tax, long‑term residence and what counts as UK‑situs assets will start to matter. We recommend reviewing wills, trusts, pensions and property ownership to avoid unexpected liabilities and ensure your wishes remain effective.

What common triggers create tax and compliance risk when moving back?

Key triggers include buying or selling UK property, re‑establishing a UK address, spending more time in the UK under the Statutory Residence Test, and transferring foreign bank accounts or investments. These events can affect residency status, reporting obligations and exposure to UK inheritance tax.

What can go wrong without cross‑border arrangements?

Without cross‑border documents you may face double administration, higher taxes, delays to asset distribution and disputes between jurisdictions. Beneficiaries can encounter frozen accounts, conflicting wills and extra probate steps that erode value and cause family stress.

How does the Statutory Residence Test work in practice?

The test uses days spent in the UK, ties to the UK (home, family, work) and automatic overseas tests to determine residency. Keep clear day counts and evidence. Small changes in travel or ties can flip your status, so plan timing of moves and activities carefully.

What is split‑year treatment and why does timing matter?

Split‑year treatment applies when your tax year is divided between UK and overseas residence. It can limit UK taxation for the first or last tax year of your move. Timing assets transfers, pension nominations and property transactions around that tax year can reduce exposure.

What records will HMRC expect after I return?

Keep travel logs, employment contracts, residency records, foreign tax filings, bank statements and property deeds. Detailed records support your residency position and help if HMRC queries past years or cross‑border income and gains.

How does UK inheritance tax work today?

UK inheritance tax applies to UK‑situs assets and, for long‑term residents, worldwide assets too. The main rate is 40% above the nil‑rate band, with a residence nil‑rate uplift for qualifying homes. Exemptions apply for spouses, civil partners and charities.

When can the nil‑rate band rise to £500,000 for a family home?

The residence nil‑rate band can increase your threshold where a qualifying property is left to direct descendants. Conditions include estates below a taper threshold and meeting the qualifying property tests. Estates exceeding the limit see tapering of the allowance.

How do the long‑term residence rules from April 2025 affect returning residents?

The 10‑out‑of‑20‑year test introduces long‑term resident status that can bring worldwide assets into UK inheritance tax. If you meet the test, leaving the UK still carries a “tail” where certain UK rules or exposures continue. Early advice helps to mitigate unexpected liabilities.

What assets are treated as UK‑situs and taxed on death?

UK‑situs assets typically include UK land and buildings, certain chattels located in the UK, UK bank accounts and UK‑registered investments. Overseas pensions and many foreign accounts may sit outside UK IHT, but rules vary and long‑term residence can change outcomes.

Should I have one will or separate wills for different jurisdictions?

Using a single, well‑drafted will can work, but separate wills for different jurisdictions sometimes reduce probate complexity and conflict. The right approach depends on where your assets sit and local succession rules. We help you choose and draft documents that work together.

When is a grant of probate likely to be needed in the UK?

A grant is usually needed when someone dies owning sole UK assets above a threshold, such as property or bank accounts without joint holders. Executors use the grant to deal with banks, sell property or access accounts. Jointly held assets often pass automatically.

How do lasting powers of attorney help on return?

Lasting powers of attorney (LPAs) let appointed people make decisions if you lack capacity. You can create LPAs for health and welfare and for property and financial affairs. Registering them with the Office of the Public Guardian before they are needed avoids delays and gives family peace of mind.

How can forced heirship rules abroad affect my UK wishes?

Countries such as France, Spain and the UAE may impose forced shares that limit how you distribute foreign property. Local succession law can override parts of a UK will. Early cross‑border advice helps you structure ownership to reduce conflict and protect beneficiaries.

Will I face double taxation on an inheritance?

Sometimes both the UK and another country can claim tax on the same asset. Double taxation agreements can offset liabilities, but coverage varies. We review treaties, local rates and reliefs to reduce overall tax and coordinate filings in both jurisdictions.

What inheritance tax mitigation options are available to returning residents?

Options include lifetime gifting, using the annual exemption, trusts (where appropriate), and reviewing ownership structures. The seven‑year rule, taper relief and excluded property trusts can be useful. Each measure has reporting and timing considerations.

How do pensions and death benefits change from April 2027?

Proposed changes affect how defined contribution and defined benefit pension pots are taxed on death. Nominating beneficiaries, reviewing age‑related rules and considering transfers now can protect family outcomes. Check your schemes and seek specific advice for complex cases.

What should I do six to twelve months before moving back?

Start by reviewing residency prospects, offshore holdings and pension arrangements. Consider timing of property sales, beneficiary nominations and whether trusts need updating. Early review gives time to implement steps that reduce exposure and simplify future administration.

When is it sensible to book a free consultation with a cross‑border specialist?

Book a consultation if you plan to move in the next year, hold UK or foreign property, have significant savings or pensions overseas, or run family trusts. Early advice helps protect wealth, reduce tax risk and ensure documents work across jurisdictions.

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