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Naming a Non-US Citizen as Beneficiary Naming a non-US citizen as a beneficiary of a trust can expose the trust to increased tax liability or could result in double taxation. In addition, there may be complexities of transferring or making distributions to a non-US trustee depending on the country of citizenship.
Technically under California law, you could name a non-resident of the United States as your executor and then that person could request that the court appoint him or her to perform executor duties. (Probate Code 8465(a)(2), 8402(a)(4).) Non-citizens who are U.S. residents can be executors too. Naming Non-Citizens as Beneficiaries, Trustees, and Executors calprobate.com blog the-generation-skip calprobate.com blog the-generation-skip
Specific Estate Planning Issues Related to Non-Citizens. It must be stated at the outset that regardless of age, amount of wealth, or citizenship status, everyone must create an estate plan in order to protect against a probate at death, incapacity, or simply to name guardians for their minor children. Estate Planning for the Non-Citizen - Bridge Law LLP bridgelawllp.com estate-planning-for-the- bridgelawllp.com estate-planning-for-the-
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.
The answer is yes; noncitizens can inherit property just as citizens can. So when you make your will or living trust, or name beneficiaries for your retirement accounts or life insurance policies, there is no problem with naming your noncitizen spouse.

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You can typically add foreign assets to a living trust. However, before talking to anyone else, you should sit down and write out a list of foreign assets that you want to add to your living trust. Then identify the country where you hold the property. How to Add Foreign Assets to Living Trusts: 10 Steps - wikiHow wikihow.com Add-Foreign-Assets-to-Livi wikihow.com Add-Foreign-Assets-to-Livi
It is not only permissible, but essential for those individuals, like U.S. citizens, to have estate plans in place. There are a number of special issues non-citizens may need to consider. It is possible that a non-U.S. citizen may own property located in another country.
While international estate planning contains many of the same components, financial strategies, and tools as domestic estate planning, some aspects require additional attention, including: International Tax and Inheritance Regimes. Residency, Citizenship, and Domicile Status Differences. International Estate Planning in California | Janet Brewer calprobate.com palo-alto-california-interna calprobate.com palo-alto-california-interna

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