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Square Pegs in Round Holes – You Like "To-May-To" and I Like "To-Mah-To"

Square Pegs in Round Holes – You Like "To-May-To" and I Like "To-Mah-To"

In a post-COVID-19 world, anecdotal evidence suggests that individuals and families are relocating to new jurisdictions of residence. Equally, individuals have evidenced renewed vigor in acquiring and structuring assets across a range of jurisdictions. When the individual is a U.S. citizen and the place to relocate or acquire assets is the U.K., care must be taken to avoid common – and not so common – traps and pitfalls regarding taxation. In their article, Ed Powles, a Partner of Maurice Turnor Gardner, London and Emma-Jane Weider, the Managing Partner of Maurice Turnor Gardner, London, identify areas for which tax planning is crucially important prior to a move. Included are (i) tax residence and domicile rules for individuals, (ii) residence tests for trusts, companies, and charities, (iii) identifying areas for which income tax treaties do not necessarily provide relief against double taxation, and (iv) ways in which gift and estate planning, dissolution of marriages, forced heirship, and structures to own personal use residential real property are affected by the move.

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International Marriages – Special U.S. Tax Concepts

International Marriages – Special U.S. Tax Concepts

Continuing with the theme of cross-border mobility and resulting tax consequences, U.S. tax law contains provisions that affect married couples coming to live in the U.S. from a country that has a community property regimes in force and effect. They may find that income tax consequences are not necessarily controlled by the marital laws of the former home country. The Internal Revenue Code contains provisions that apply to earned income that override community property regimes when one or both spouses are not U.S. residents or citizens. Nina Krauthamer and Galia Antebi address the circumstances controlled by Code §879. They also address rules for filing joint income tax returns when one spouse is not a U.S. citizen or resident, available elections under Code §6013(g) and (h) to allow for the filing of joint tax returns, elections for arriving persons to be treated as residents with an accelerated residency starting date, and tricky trust and estate rules that apply to a donor spouse when the donee spouse is not a citizen. A must read for arriving individuals.

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