Offshore Trust

Setting up Offshore Trust

While many of the tax perks traditionally linked with offshore trusts have been scaled back, they can still deliver meaningful benefits for internationally mobile families especially beyond purely tax considerations. Offshore trusts can take various forms, including hybrid trusts that combine features of trusts and corporate entities to enhance asset protection and tax advantages.

Setup Offshore Trust

An offshore trust lets you transfer assets to trustees (rather than giving them directly) without losing control — so you may still receive income or capital back if needed. An offshore trust structure can be tailored to individual needs and can hold assets such as real estate, investment portfolios, business interests, and intellectual property. In the right jurisdiction, you also gain extra privacy or protection from claims (e.g. by creditors or ex-spouses).

Many foreign jurisdictions and offshore structures offer different legal protections, privacy, and costs, so choosing the right foreign jurisdiction is crucial. Many offshore jurisdictions are well regulated, and specialist trust companies can bring experienced professionals to manage the trust and its holdings. Wealthy individuals and those in high risk professions often use offshore trusts to protect assets and provide for future generations.

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    Over the past two decades, the UK has introduced complex anti-avoidance rules that have eroded many of the tax advantages once available to UK-based settlors and beneficiaries. Even so, for individuals who are non-UK domiciled, some offshore trust structures remain viable for deferring or reducing UK tax obligations.

    When setting up and managing an offshore trust, the trust deed is a foundational legal document that outlines the trust’s terms, conditions, and key protections. Seeking professional advice is essential when establishing or managing an offshore trust to ensure compliance and optimal structuring.

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    Inheritance Tax Advantages

    If you are a non-UK domiciled settlor (i.e. the person creating the trust), placing foreign assets into an offshore trust before you become “deemed UK domiciled” can shield those assets from UK inheritance tax — without giving up your interest in them. For long term UK residents, worldwide assets may become subject to UK inheritance tax depending on their residence status and the classification of assets as excluded property. Settled offshore trusts and property trusts can provide inheritance tax protection for non UK domiciled individuals, but this protection may be lost if the settlor becomes deemed domiciled or a long term UK resident.

    However, note that using an offshore trust with UK residential property (held via a non-UK company) no longer provides the same inheritance tax protection. Excluded property status is now determined by residence status and recent legislative changes, and deemed domiciled individuals may lose excluded property protection. Assets abroad placed in offshore trusts before becoming deemed domiciled can retain excluded property status, but this may change with new rules affecting settled offshore trusts. That said, non-UK assets that have no connection to UK residential property may still benefit from trust protection.

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    What Exactly Is an Offshore Trust?

    A trust is considered a “non-UK resident trust” if:

    • All trustees are non-UK resident, or
    • If there’s a mix of UK and non-UK resident trustees, the settlor was not resident or domiciled in the UK at the time the trust was settled.

    A non resident trust is one where the trustees or the trust itself are not UK tax resident. Non UK resident trusts are subject to different tax rules than UK resident trusts, particularly regarding the tax treatment of foreign income and capital gains.

    Under such a structure, the trust itself is generally exempt from UK tax on foreign income and capital gains (though it remains liable on UK-source income, gains tied to UK real estate, companies deriving value from UK land, or UK businesses). However, UK residents who are beneficiaries or settlors of non UK resident trusts may still face UK taxation on certain income and gains, depending on the settlements code and other tax rules.

    The UK has specific anti-avoidance provisions to treat trust income or gains as attributable to UK-resident settlors or beneficiaries in certain circumstances. The tax treatment and tax implications for UK residents involved with offshore trusts are complex, and understanding the relevant UK taxation rules is essential to determine when and how to pay UK tax or claim tax benefits.

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    Taxation of the Settlor: Capital Gains Tax

    • If you are a UK resident settlor, you will typically be taxed on all trust income and gains — unless the trust qualifies as a “protected trust”. Income arising and gains arising within the trust may be attributed to the settlor as their own income for capital gains tax purposes. Trust assets may be subject to capital gains tax when disposed of, and the value of foreign assets can be rebased for capital gains tax purposes to determine the correct tax liability.
    • If it is a protected trust, you continue to be taxed on UK-source income but foreign income and capital gains can often remain within the trust, untaxed, so long as the trust itself is not taxed. In some cases, the settlor may be able to claim relief on certain foreign income or gains, depending on the tax purposes and relevant UK tax rules.

    To qualify as a protected trust: you must not have been deemed UK-domiciled when settling it, and you must avoid making additions to it after becoming deemed UK domiciled.

    Taxation of Beneficiaries

    • Distributions of income to UK resident beneficiaries (including the settlor) are taxed as income. A UK resident beneficiary who receives income or capital payments from a non-resident trust may be required to complete a self assessment tax return to report these amounts.
    • Distributions of capital (under powers to advance capital) may also incur income tax if they are deemed to stem from accumulated income.
    • Pure capital distributions (free of income tax) are matched against the trust’s capital gains using a “last in, first out” (LIFO) approach. Capital payments are matched to foreign income and gains, and the timing and nature of a capital payment can affect its tax treatment. If distributions exceed accumulated gains, the portion may still be taxed — unless the trust is fully distributed.
    • For undistributed gains, a “supplementary charge” may apply — effectively a catch-up tax — which after six years can push the effective tax rate to 32%.
    • If a distribution is made to a beneficiary who is UK resident but non-domiciled and is taxed on the remittance basis, then offshore distributions are generally tax-free if they are not remitted to the UK (noting the wide definition of “remittance”).

    Recent legislative changes have introduced a temporary repatriation facility, allowing beneficiaries to remit foreign income and gains to the UK at a reduced tax rate within a limited time frame.

    Planning Opportunities

    In favorable circumstances, an offshore trust can still yield UK tax efficiencies:

    • As a non-UK domiciled settlor, foreign assets held in the trust may remain outside UK inheritance tax even after you become deemed UK domiciled.
    • Income and capital gains can accumulate within the trust, free from UK tax, until distributions are made to UK resident beneficiaries (at which point UK tax may apply). However, anti avoidance legislation and complex tax rules can affect the tax treatment of offshore trusts, making it essential to understand the specific offshore jurisdiction and offshore structures involved.
    • Because UK legislation on offshore trusts is highly technical and nuanced, specialized advice is essential but in the right scenario, such trusts can deliver meaningful tax advantages.

    It is strongly recommended to seek further advice from qualified professionals to ensure compliance with current tax rules and to optimize the tax treatment of your offshore trust.

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