
UK Inheritance Tax Planning for Expats Worldwide
The Importance of IHT Planning for UK Domiciles
If you live internationally and still have UK ties, inheritance tax planning can become more complex than many families expect. Domicile status, cross-border assets, gifting, wills, pensions and changing residence patterns can all affect how your estate is assessed. Paratus Wealth supports internationally mobile clients in understanding potential UK inheritance tax exposure, structuring the right planning conversations, and accessing relevant regulated or specialist support where appropriate.
Why IHT Planning Matters for UK Domiciles
Good inheritance tax planning is not simply about reducing tax. It is about understanding what may be in scope, identifying cross-border complications early, and making sure your estate planning still reflects your family, residence pattern and long-term intentions.
Clarify Exposure:
Understand whether your UK and non-UK assets may be relevant to your inheritance tax position.
Improve Estate Readiness:
Review wills, ownership structures, gifting history and beneficiary arrangements as part of a joined-up plan.
Coordinate Next Steps
Identify where regulated investment, insurance, tax or legal input may become relevant to your wider planning.
Understanding Domicile Status
Domicile is one of the most important and most misunderstood parts of UK inheritance tax planning for expats. Living abroad does not automatically remove UK inheritance tax exposure, and residence alone does not determine the outcome. A proper review should consider your domicile background, where your assets are held, how your estate is structured, and whether specialist or regulated support is needed before decisions are made.
Estimate Your Inheritance Tax Exposure
Before speaking with us, it can help to start with an illustrative estimate. Our IHT calculator is designed to give you a practical first view of potential exposure based on your estate values and current threshold assumptions. It is not personal tax or legal advice, but it can help you understand whether a deeper cross-border planning review is likely to be worthwhile.
40%
Standard IHT rate above the threshold
£325,000
Nil-rate band per individual
£500,000
With the residence nil-rate band
Maximum combined allowance for married couples
£1,000,000



Our Expertise
What a structured IHT plan looks at
A useful inheritance tax review for an internationally mobile family usually looks beyond a single tax figure. It should consider both technical exposure and whether the wider estate plan still works across borders.
01
Nil-Rate Bands and Reliefs
We start by looking at the main inheritance tax thresholds, any residence-related allowances, and whether the structure of your estate affects how those thresholds may apply in practice.
02
Domicile and Worldwide Exposure
For expats, inheritance tax planning often turns on domicile status and asset location rather than where you currently live. We help you identify the questions that matter before further specialist or regulated work is considered.
03
Lifetime Gifting and Estate Reduction
Gifting can form part of a wider estate strategy, but it should be reviewed carefully in the context of timing, affordability, family objectives and cross-border consequences.
04
Wills, Trusts and Beneficiary Planning
Inheritance tax planning is rarely just about tax. Wills, trust structures, beneficiary nominations and ownership arrangements should work together so your estate plan remains clear and practical.
05
Life Assurance in Trust
In some cases, life assurance written in trust can form part of a wider estate plan by helping create liquidity for beneficiaries when it is needed. Its suitability depends on your objectives, estate structure and wider cross-border position.
06
Cross-Border Succession and Estate Co-ordination
For internationally mobile families, inheritance tax planning often sits alongside succession law, local estate rules and multi-jurisdiction family arrangements. A joined-up review helps identify where those issues may need to be coordinated.
Charitable Giving and Legacy Planning
Charitable giving can be one part of a broader estate plan where it reflects your personal objectives and family priorities. It should be considered alongside tax exposure, beneficiary needs and the overall structure of your estate.
07
Your IHT Planning Journey
Every client starts with clarity, not commitment. Our role is to help you understand the issues, organise the right next steps and, where relevant, connect your planning with the appropriate regulated or specialist support.
Initial Conversation
Estate and Exposure Review
Ongoing Partnership
Planning Discussion
We begin with a no-obligation discussion about your family circumstances, country of residence, UK ties and the assets that may be relevant to inheritance tax planning.
We help you organise the key planning issues, including domicile questions, asset structure, existing wills, gifting history and any areas where further specialist review may be needed.
Once the picture is clearer, we help you understand the planning routes that may be worth exploring, whether that involves estate structuring, insurance-based solutions where relevant, or regulated investment or insurance services through the appropriate network where applicable.
Inheritance tax planning evolves as legislation, residence patterns and family circumstances change. We support clients with ongoing review so the wider plan stays joined up over time.
Clients
A Diverse range of Clients supported in planning their cross-border estate
Regulated
Our advisory business operates under numerous licences
Qualified
Our advisers are qualified planners, not tied to any provider or institution
Global
Advising expats and internationally mobile professionals & Families
Further Reading and Resources
Inheritance tax planning rarely sits in isolation. These related resources can help you understand the wider planning picture before or after your first conversation with us.

Inheritance Tax FAQs for Expats
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