Who Needs Foreign Income & Expat Tax Returns?
You likely need our specialist service if any of these situations apply to you:
Living in UK with income from overseas properties, investments, or employment
Living overseas but with UK income, properties, or planning to return
Using remittance basis or needing worldwide income reporting
Tax residents in both UK and another country under tie-breaker rules
Working across borders or seconded overseas by UK employer
With investments, pensions, or businesses in multiple countries
Understanding Your UK Tax Residency Status
Taxed on worldwide income and gains
Must declare all foreign income
Can claim foreign tax credits
Taxed only on UK income
May still need UK tax return
Exempt from UK tax on foreign income
Tax resident in UK and another country
Tie-breaker rules in tax treaties apply
Complex filing requirements
Types of Foreign Income Requiring Reporting
You must declare these foreign income sources to HMRC through Self Assessment:
- Rental income from overseas properties
- Holiday let income abroad
- Property sale gains overseas
- Timeshare rental income
- Foreign REIT distributions
- Salary from overseas employer
- Secondment income while abroad
- Overseas bonuses and commissions
- Foreign director's fees
- International consultancy income
- Overseas dividend income
- Foreign interest from bank accounts
- International stock market gains
- Foreign trust distributions
- Overseas bond income
- Overseas self-employment income
- Foreign partnership profits
- International consultancy fees
- Cross-border e-commerce income
- Overseas affiliate marketing
- Overseas state pensions
- Foreign private pension income
- International annuity payments
- Pension transfers from abroad
- Overseas retirement lump sums
- Overseas rental income
- Foreign royalty payments
- International alimony/maintenance
- Overseas gambling winnings
- Foreign inheritance income
What is the Remittance Basis? Non-doms can choose to be taxed only on UK income and foreign income brought into the UK.
Benefits
• Tax only on UK income
• Foreign income tax-free if not remitted
• Protection from worldwide taxation
Considerations
• £30,000 annual charge after 7 years
• £60,000 annual charge after 12 years
• Complex tracking of remittances
Our Service Includes: Remittance basis planning, remittance tracking, annual charge calculation, and optimal election timing.
🤝 Double Taxation Agreements (DTAs)
UK has tax treaties with over 130 countries to prevent being taxed twice on the same income.
How we help: We identify applicable tax treaties, claim foreign tax credits, complete required forms, and ensure optimal tax treatment under treaty provisions.
Client: Sarah, British expat working in Dubai with UK rental properties
Situation: Confused about residency status, paying tax in both countries on same income
Our Specialist Analysis Found:
- Qualified as non-resident under Statutory Residence Test
- UK-UAE tax treaty provided complete relief
- Overpaid UK tax on Dubai salary: £18,200
- Incorrect property expense claims: £6,400
- Missed foreign tax credits: £3,800
Result: Tax refund of £28,400 + future annual saving of £15,600
Client Comment: "The international tax expertise was invaluable. They navigated complex UAE-UK tax rules that three previous accountants couldn't understand."
Common Expat & Foreign Income Scenarios
Filing UK Self Assessment and US Form 1040
FATCA reporting requirements
Foreign Earned Income Exclusion coordination
Post-Brexit tax implications
EU pension income reporting
Cross-border employment income
Split-year treatment planning
Foreign asset reporting
Remittance basis decisions
Frequently Asked Questions
If you are UK resident, you must pay UK tax on your worldwide income. However, you may be able to claim relief for foreign tax paid through Double Taxation Agreements. Non-residents only pay UK tax on UK income. The remittance basis may also be available for non-domiciled individuals.
UK tax residency is determined by the Statutory Residence Test, which considers factors like: number of days spent in UK, UK ties (family, work, accommodation), and whether you have a home in UK. Generally, if you spend 183+ days in UK in a tax year, you're automatically resident. Fewer days require analysis of multiple factors.
The remittance basis allows non-domiciled UK residents to be taxed only on UK income and foreign income brought into the UK. It's beneficial if you have substantial foreign income that you don't need in the UK. However, after 7 years of UK residence, there's a £30,000 annual charge, rising to £60,000 after 12 years. Professional advice is essential.
Yes, it's possible to be tax resident in two countries simultaneously. When this happens, Double Taxation Agreements include "tie-breaker" clauses to determine which country has primary taxing rights. These consider factors like permanent home, centre of vital interests, habitual abode, and nationality. Professional analysis is required to determine your status.
Essential records include: foreign bank statements, payslips from overseas employers, rental agreements for foreign properties, dividend statements from foreign companies, foreign tax returns and payment receipts, currency conversion records, and documentation of any foreign tax credits claimed. Keep records for at least 6 years after the relevant tax year.
