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Posted

I have property and assets in the UK and I'd like to will everything to my Thai wife so, when I croak it, there won't be loads of IHT to pay.  My Thai wife doesn't have a British passport or connections in the UK. will my assets automatically pass to her as a non British citizen or do I need to do mountains of paper work to prevent UK government taking even more money. Has Anyone else dealt with this situation or can recommend a lawyer experienced in this field. Cheers.

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Posted
14 minutes ago, roquefort said:

Just make a UK will leaving everything to your wife. Any decent UK solicitor can handle it.

 

But how does she go about processing it if she is in Thailand? 

 

I am in the same situation and was about to post a similar question.

Posted

If your estate is worth more than £325,000, you need to check the position regarding inheritance tax.

UNLESS the situation has changed under Rachel Reeves, a wife (spouse ) who is a UK citizen can inherit tax free, however, a spouse who is NOT a UK citizen will pay 40% inheritance tax on any amount in excess of £325,000.

Certainly this was the position last year, when I was sorting this out, however, I don’t know if Rachel Reeves or Starmer have made changes that alter this.

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Posted
On 1/15/2025 at 2:03 PM, Jimmy B said:

I have property and assets in the UK and I'd like to will everything to my Thai wife so, when I croak it, there won't be loads of IHT to pay.  My Thai wife doesn't have a British passport or connections in the UK. will my assets automatically pass to her as a non British citizen or do I need to do mountains of paper work to prevent UK government taking even more money. Has Anyone else dealt with this situation or can recommend a lawyer experienced in this field. Cheers.

An estate is handled by a court in the country of primary residence. So, id you live in Thailand, it will be a Thai court and follow Thai law.

Thai lawyers suggests to make two wills, if you have assets in both your home country and country of residence. Property might still follow law in the country where the property is places, even that the will is handled by a court in another country.

Posted
1 hour ago, khunPer said:

An estate is handled by a court in the country of primary residence. So, id you live in Thailand, it will be a Thai court and follow Thai law.

Thai lawyers suggests to make two wills, if you have assets in both your home country and country of residence. Property might still follow law in the country where the property is places, even that the will is handled by a court in another country.

Not true if you are a Brit. He owns a house in the UK so HMRC will consider him domiciled in the UK and his worldwide assets will be used for inheritance tax calculations. The only good news is that you can get up to £175,000 tax free for the house making a total of £500,000.

Posted
3 hours ago, alanrchase said:

Not true if you are a Brit. He owns a house in the UK so HMRC will consider him domiciled in the UK and his worldwide assets will be used for inheritance tax calculations. The only good news is that you can get up to £175,000 tax free for the house making a total of £500,000.

Need to update that information as it seems it will change on 6 Apr 25. Seems they are changing from domicile to residence however UK inheritance tax will still apply to UK assets. 

 

https://www.stoneking.co.uk/literature/e-bulletins/october-budget-2024-changes-domicile-uk-inheritance-tax

Posted

A frequently overlooked point. English law, Scots law or N.I. law. All can e subtly different.

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