Practice Areas | International Tax and Planning

International Tax and Planning

We are assisting clients with their income tax liabilities regarding assets held outside the United States and helping non-U.S. citizens to understand their U.S. tax liabilities.

Yahne Miorini is frequently a speaker regarding estate and gift topics for non-U.S. citizens.

International Tax and Planning

We are assisting clients with their income tax liabilities regarding assets held outside the United States and helping non-U.S. citizens to understand their U.S. tax liabilities.

Yahne Miorini is frequently a speaker regarding estate and gift topics for non-U.S. citizens.

Estate Planning for Non-Citizens

The concept of residency, while based on visa status for income tax purposes, is based on several criteria for estate and gift tax purposes.  Therefore, an individual may have a non-resident status for income tax and a resident status for gift and estate tax.

The estate and gift tax rules are very different for a non-resident alien and a resident alien.  Certain tax advantages provided to spouses do not apply to non-citizen spouses such as the unlimited marital deduction or the joint-property ownership presumption for a couple.

Finally, rules from one country to another provide different rights to family members. Yahne Miorini helps families to assess their inheritance right

Inheritance rights and the ability to disinherit heirs in France and the United States.

Tax Reporting Obligations

The U.S. federal government has a very extensive tax reporting requirement including the declaration of accounts and investments held outside of the United States, and for gifts received from abroad. Even though no tax may be due, drastic penalties and criminal charges may be encountered if certain tax returns are not filed.

Finally, the status of expatriate and foreign trusts has a lot of specificities and serious tax implications not only for the individual or trustee but also for the recipients of gifts or distribution from either the expatriate or the foreign trust.

We can assist you to assess your taxable situation, or offer you an estate plan tailored to your needs.

Non-Citizen Estate Planning FAQ

Yes it is. There is a hard and fast rule for determining residency for income tax purposes while there is a “facts and circumstances” rule for estate tax purposes. The different rules mean that a person can be classified as a non U.S. resident for income tax but as US resident for estate tax.
The IRS applies the “facts and circumstances” rules, meaning that a person has the intent to permanently reside in the US showed by certain facts such as a purchase of a main residence in the US, location of close family members, certain of activity, execution of estate planning documents, etc.
When an individual is qualified as US resident for estate tax purposes, the individual is treated like a US citizen for gifts and estate tax meaning that the individual will be taxed on his/her worldwide assets while a foreigner who is not a US resident will be taxed on the US assets only at a different tax rate and with the very small tax exemption of $60 000.
If you are considered a US resident or a US citizen you have to report your overseas income.
There are many international treaties designed to prevent double taxation so it is likely you will not have to pay tax twice however, you still have an obligation to report.
You will have to file an extension for your U.S. taxes so that you can file them accurately.
The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 made substantial changes to the tax information and reporting rules for ex-citizens. Certain individuals called “covered expatriates” still have to file U.S. tax returns if their citizenship or long term resident status changed after June 3, 2004.
The rules for determining this changed significantly in 1996 and again in 1999. In general a trust is a foreign trust unless a U.S. court can exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust and one or more U.S. persons have the power to control all of the substantial decisions of the trust.
For a trust where there is some question as to whether it is a U.S. or foreign trust, the trust has 12 months to reassert U.S. control by either a change of trustee or a change in citizenship of a trustee.
Generally no, with the exception of U.S. withholding tax on any U.S. sourced income. A foreign trust that accumulates income will not have to pay any U.S. taxes; however, if it pays that income to a U.S. person, that person will have to pay taxes on the income.
Generally no, if a non-U.S. person sets up a trust for the benefit of a U.S. person, the U.S. person will be taxed on the income received.
Yes, if a trust distributes income to a beneficiary in a year other than the one it is earned in the beneficiary will have to pay taxes on that income. In addition, IRS counts the due date of any tax on that income as being in the year it was earned. Thus, taxes on income that is not distributed in the year it is earned will have a tax penalty running from the date it would have been paid.
Yes, one way is to create a U.S. trust that is a subsidiary of the foreign trust to receive capital gains or accumulated income.
A person whose primary residence, or domicile, is in the United States.
Worldwide assets. There are international treaties similar to the ones for income tax purposes to limit double taxation for estate tax.
You will only have to pay estate tax on those assets located in the United States.
Yes. The non-citizen spouse does not have the benefit of the unlimited marital deduction. In addition the non-citizen does not benefit of the presumption that joint property is owned 50% by each spouse. The non-citizen spouse will have to prove his/her contribution in the joint property.

Alternative 1: If the inherited assets are titled into a special trust called Qualified Domestic Trust (QDT), the payment of estate tax is postponed until the assets are distributed from the trust. A QDT requires that one trustee is a US citizen.

Alternative 2: A special annual exemption of $136 000 is available instead of the standard annual exemption of $13 000. With this special exemption, an asset protection/tax planning is available through the funding of life insurance trust (ILIT).

Yes. To be in compliance with the International Convention of 1973 in Washington, DC, a testament will be an international will if the testator signs all pages of the will in the presence of two witnesses, a notary public, and an attorney. A certificate completed by the attorney who drafted the will shall be attached to the will.
Yes. If the names guardians live overseas, I suggest that you also name temporary local guardians in order to give time for the overseas guardians to apply for visas and make arrangements for coming.
Upon your death, your family members will lose their visa status. One solution is to name your spouse executor of your estate. Your spouse will be entitled to apply for a business visa in order to wind up the estate.
Yes and you should in order for your spouse to apply of a visa.
Certain state laws do not allow a non-citizen to be appointed executor of an estate unless the non-citizen is a surviving spouse. Other state do not have limitation however, the non-citizen often cannot be bonded. To summarize, it is better to appoint a US citizen.

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