
18 May 2026
Retirement planning is about more than choosing where to settle. If you hold property, savings, or assets in the UK, inheritance tax (IHT) is a complexity you genuinely need to understand.
For immigrants, the stakes are high. Your financial life crosses borders, involving assets in both the UK and your home country. This guide breaks down the essential IHT rules for long-term immigrants.
The standard IHT rate is 40%, applied to the value of your estate above the tax-free nil-rate bands. These thresholds are fixed until at least April 2030.
| Allowance Type | Threshold (2024/25) |
|---|---|
| Nil-Rate Band (Standard) | £325,000 |
| Residence Nil-Rate Band | £175,000 |
| Combined Threshold (Individual) | £500,000 |
| Combined Threshold (Married Couple) | £1,000,000 |
UK inheritance tax receipts hit a record £7.5 billion in 2023/24. Rising property values and frozen thresholds mean more estates are being pulled into taxable territory.
Domicile, not nationality, determines how HMRC taxes your worldwide assets.
HMRC may treat you as UK-domiciled if you have lived here for many years with the clear intention of making it your permanent home. Getting professional clarity on your domicile status is the single most important estate planning step.
If you are UK-domiciled, your overseas property is fully included in your taxable estate. However, specific reliefs and treaties can reduce this burden.
Normal Expenditure Out of Income: Regular remittances home (e.g., to Pakistan or India) may be exempt if they come from income, are consistent, and don't reduce your standard of living. Keep meticulous records!
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Yes, thresholds and rates are uniform across the UK. However, local succession law (especially in Scotland) can affect how your estate is distributed.
Not automatically, but it's a real risk. HMRC looks at your intention. If you behave as though the UK is your permanent home, they may treat your worldwide estate as taxable.
It is included in your UK taxable estate at the 40% rate. Double taxation agreements may prevent you from being taxed twice on the same asset.
Yes. Regular gifts from income may be exempt under the 'normal expenditure out of income' rule, meaning they won't count toward your taxable estate.