Contents
  1. Why International Bitcoin Holders Face Unique Complexity
  2. US Estate Tax for Citizens Abroad
  3. Non-Resident Alien Estate Tax & Bitcoin Situs
  4. Estate Tax Treaties and Bitcoin
  5. FBAR and FATCA for Bitcoin Holders Abroad
  6. Country-Specific Bitcoin Inheritance Laws
  7. Renunciation — The Nuclear Option
  8. Wyoming Trusts for Americans Abroad
  9. Key Mistakes US Expats Make
  10. Practical Recommendations by Situation

Why International Bitcoin Holders Face Unique Estate Planning Complexity

Bitcoin was designed without borders. A private key stored in a Swiss safe deposit box can control coins held on the Bitcoin network — a network that answers to no sovereign. For most of its early history, that borderlessness was treated as a feature by holders who preferred to operate outside the financial system. For estate planners, it is a four-alarm fire.

When a Bitcoin holder is also an international person — a US citizen living in Portugal, a German national holding a hardware wallet in Singapore, an Emirati investor who bought Bitcoin through a US exchange — the estate planning picture becomes uniquely complicated. You are not dealing with one country's rules. You are dealing with the collision of multiple tax systems, competing definitions of property, treaty gaps, reporting regimes, and inheritance statutes that were written long before digital assets existed.

The core challenges break down into five categories:

This article works through each of these dimensions systematically. By the end, you will have a clear framework for understanding your exposure and the strategic options available depending on your specific situation.

Core Doctrine

Never write seed phrases, private keys, or hardware wallet PINs in wills, trust documents, or any probate-filed paper. Probate records become public in most jurisdictions. A seed phrase in a will is an open invitation to theft. The mechanics of Bitcoin access must be solved through entirely separate, non-public channels.

US Estate Tax for US Citizens Abroad

The United States imposes estate tax on the worldwide assets of US citizens — full stop. It does not matter whether you live in Paris, Lisbon, Dubai, or Singapore. If you hold a US passport, your entire global estate is potentially subject to US federal estate tax upon your death.

This is one of the most consequential and least understood aspects of being an American with international wealth. Most developed countries impose estate or inheritance taxes only on assets physically or legally located within their borders. The US is an outlier: it follows you wherever you go.

The Current Exemption and Rate

For 2026, the federal estate tax exemption is $15 million per individual (indexed for inflation from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act levels). Estates below this threshold owe no federal estate tax. Estates above it face a top rate of 40% on the excess. The unlimited marital deduction remains available — assets passing to a US citizen spouse pass free of estate tax regardless of amount.

Importantly, the elevated exemption is not permanent legislation. It was set by the TCJA as a temporary doubling of the pre-2018 baseline. Congress determines whether and at what level the exemption continues. Planning that relies entirely on today's exemption level without hedging against future legislative changes is incomplete planning.

Foreign Tax Credits and Double Taxation

When a US citizen also owes estate or inheritance tax in their country of residence, the US provides a credit for foreign death taxes paid — but only on assets located in that country, and only under specific treaty or statutory frameworks. For Bitcoin held through non-US custodians or structures, this credit may be difficult or impossible to claim, potentially leading to double taxation.

Bitcoin in the Estate Tax Calculation

Bitcoin is property for US federal tax purposes (IRS Notice 2014-21). It is included in a decedent's gross estate at fair market value on the date of death (or the alternate valuation date six months later, if elected). For large Bitcoin positions, this creates significant estate tax exposure even for holders who have never thought of themselves as wealthy in traditional terms — a person who accumulated 10 BTC at low prices and did not plan their estate could die with holdings worth millions, triggering substantial estate tax.

The stepped-up basis rules (IRC §1014) apply to Bitcoin just as to other capital assets. Heirs receive a new cost basis equal to the date-of-death value, eliminating capital gains tax on appreciation that occurred during the decedent's lifetime. This is a significant benefit — but it only helps the heirs with income tax, not the estate with estate tax.

Planning Implication

For US citizens abroad with Bitcoin holdings approaching or exceeding the estate tax exemption, the priority planning tools are the same as for domestic holders: irrevocable trusts (including SLATs and BDITs), charitable structures (CRTs, CLTs), and strategic gifting. The international dimension adds reporting layers but does not eliminate access to these tools.

Non-Resident Alien Estate Tax and Bitcoin Situs

Non-resident aliens — foreign nationals who are not US citizens or green card holders — face a very different US estate tax picture. The United States taxes NRAs only on US-situs assets. Assets located outside the US are generally not subject to US estate tax.

But for NRAs, the exemption is strikingly low: only $60,000. This is not a typo. While US citizens get a $15 million exemption, non-resident aliens get $60,000 before the 40% estate tax rate kicks in on US-situs assets. We cover this exposure — and the five primary structuring strategies to eliminate it — in dedicated depth in our guide to Bitcoin estate planning for non-resident aliens.

What Counts as US-Situs for Estate Tax?

For most traditional assets, situs is relatively clear. Real property in the US is US-situs. Shares of US corporations are US-situs. US bank accounts (with an exception for nonresident alien bank deposits under §2105(b)) are US-situs. The NRA estate tax framework was built around an asset landscape that has physical or legal attachment to a specific place.

Bitcoin creates a serious problem in this framework. Where is Bitcoin? The question does not have a clean answer.

The Bitcoin Situs Debate

Several competing theories circulate:

The IRS has not issued definitive guidance on Bitcoin situs for estate tax purposes. The absence of guidance does not mean the absence of risk — it means uncertainty, and in estate planning, uncertainty is dangerous.

Critical Risk for Foreign Nationals

A non-resident alien holding significant Bitcoin through a US-based exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini) with no estate plan faces potential exposure to US estate tax on amounts above $60,000 at a 40% rate. With no planning and a large Bitcoin position, heirs could face a multi-million dollar US estate tax bill with a $60,000 exemption. This is not theoretical — it is an enforcement risk that grows as Bitcoin values rise.

The practical response for NRAs is to consider holding Bitcoin through non-US entities or non-US custodians, making the situs argument cleaner. Holding through a Cayman Islands or BVI holding company, for instance, converts the NRA's US-situs exposure from the underlying Bitcoin to the question of whether foreign corporation shares are US-situs (they generally are not). This strategy requires proper legal implementation and should not be done informally.

Estate Tax Treaties and Bitcoin

The United States has estate and gift tax treaties with a relatively small number of countries. Unlike the extensive network of income tax treaties (which currently covers roughly 70 countries), the US has estate tax treaties with only about 15 nations.

Country Treaty Type Key Benefit Bitcoin Coverage
United Kingdom Estate & Gift Credits, exemption expansion for NRAs Ambiguous — no explicit provision
Germany Estate & Inheritance Credits for taxes paid to other country Ambiguous — no explicit provision
France Estate & Gift Tie-breaking residency rules Ambiguous — no explicit provision
Netherlands Estate & Inheritance Avoidance of double taxation Ambiguous — no explicit provision
Australia Estate (limited) Situs coordination Unclear
Japan Estate & Inheritance Avoidance of double taxation Ambiguous — no explicit provision
Switzerland Estate & Inheritance Credit for Swiss taxes against US estate tax Ambiguous — no explicit provision

The critical limitation: every US estate tax treaty was negotiated before Bitcoin existed. None contain explicit provisions for digital assets. Whether Bitcoin qualifies as the type of property covered by treaty provisions — and how it is characterized — requires treaty-by-treaty analysis that has not yet been authoritatively resolved.

How Treaties Can Help

For NRAs from treaty countries, treaties can expand the estate tax exemption significantly — in some cases bringing it closer to the US citizen exemption level. The UK treaty, for example, provides NRA UK residents a proportionate exemption based on the ratio of their US-situs assets to worldwide assets. This can be enormously valuable for UK nationals with large Bitcoin estates.

For US citizens abroad, treaties provide foreign tax credit protections that can reduce double taxation when both the US and the country of residence impose death taxes on the same assets.

Treaty Gaps: Countries With No US Treaty

Most Bitcoin-popular expatte destinations — Portugal, UAE, Singapore, El Salvador — have no US estate tax treaty. US citizens in these jurisdictions face potential double death taxation (or more accurately, death taxation by the US with no treaty relief for any local tax) without the protection of treaty credits or exemptions. This is a significant planning gap that affects many of today's Bitcoin-wealthy expats.

FBAR and FATCA for Bitcoin Holders Abroad

Beyond estate tax, US persons holding Bitcoin abroad face two separate reporting regimes with severe penalties for non-compliance: the Foreign Bank Account Report (FBAR) and the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). These interact with estate planning in ways that are often overlooked.

FBAR (FinCEN 114)

FBAR requires US persons to report foreign financial accounts with aggregate balances exceeding $10,000 at any point during the calendar year. The original rules were written for bank and securities accounts, and their application to Bitcoin held on foreign exchanges has evolved.

As of 2024-2026, FinCEN has proposed rules that would formally extend FBAR requirements to foreign virtual currency accounts. The current state: foreign exchange accounts holding virtual currency are strongly advised to be reported, and the IRS has taken the position (via the FBAR instructions) that virtual currency accounts at foreign exchanges are reportable. Non-compliance penalties are severe: up to $10,000 per year for non-willful violations, and the greater of $100,000 or 50% of account balance per year for willful violations.

FATCA (Form 8938)

FATCA requires US taxpayers to report "specified foreign financial assets" exceeding $50,000 (or higher thresholds for married filers and those abroad) on Form 8938. Bitcoin held directly on a foreign exchange generally constitutes a "specified foreign financial asset." Failure to report carries a $10,000 penalty per form, with an additional $10,000 per month (up to $50,000) for continued failure after IRS notice.

How These Interact With Estate Planning

The reporting obligations have two critical estate planning implications:

Compliance Foundation

Before engaging in any Bitcoin estate planning that involves foreign structures or custodians, get current on FBAR and FATCA compliance. Retroactive filings are possible through the IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures (for non-willful violations) — but the window and terms could change. Start with compliance before layering on planning structures.

Country-Specific Bitcoin Inheritance Laws

For Bitcoin holders choosing where to live, or those already abroad, the local legal environment for Bitcoin inheritance matters enormously. The following profiles cover six jurisdictions that consistently attract Bitcoin-wealthy individuals:

🇵🇹
Portugal
Highly Favorable

No capital gains tax on Bitcoin sales for non-professional holders. The NHR (Non-Habitual Residency) regime offers 10-year flat-rate income tax benefits for new residents. Inheritance: no inheritance tax between direct family members. Stamp duty of 10% on gifts/inheritances to non-direct family.

🇸🇻
El Salvador
Favorable (Caveats)

Bitcoin is legal tender; no capital gains tax on Bitcoin. No inheritance tax. Attractive for Bitcoin-only holders. Infrastructure and legal system limitations remain concerns for trust implementation and succession planning at scale.

🇦🇪
UAE (Dubai)
Highly Favorable

No personal income tax, no capital gains tax, no estate or inheritance tax. DIFC (Dubai International Financial Centre) offers a mature trust and foundation framework under common law. Highly attractive for Bitcoin allocation strategies for HNW investors Bitcoin holders building multigenerational structures.

🇨🇭
Switzerland
Favorable (Nuanced)

No federal capital gains tax on private crypto holdings. Annual wealth tax applies (cantonal variation — Zug is favorable). Inheritance tax varies by canton. Geneva imposes inheritance tax on non-direct heirs; Zug does not. Top-tier custody infrastructure.

🇩🇪
Germany
Favorable for Long-Term Holders

Bitcoin gains held over one year are completely tax-free for individuals. Inheritance tax applies to all assets — rates vary by relationship (€500K exemption for spouses, €400K for children). Bitcoin inherited is taxed at the date-of-death value.

🇸🇬
Singapore
Highly Favorable

No capital gains tax. No estate duty (abolished 2008). Mature trust law (Trustees Act, Variable Capital Companies). Growing Bitcoin custody infrastructure. Strong legal system and rule of law. Favored by Asian HNW Bitcoin holders for multi-jurisdictional trust structures.

Deep Dives: Key Considerations Per Country

Portugal — NHR Regime and Succession

Portugal's NHR regime (now restructured as the IFICI "non-habitual resident" tax status under 2024 reforms) remains attractive for Bitcoin holders who can qualify. The absence of capital gains tax on Bitcoin for private, non-professional holders is a major draw. However, US citizens in Portugal face a critical overlay: they still owe US estate tax on worldwide assets, still must file FBAR and FATCA, and Portugal has no US estate tax treaty. Any Bitcoin estate plan for a US citizen in Portugal must address both regimes simultaneously.

UAE — DIFC Trusts

The DIFC operates as a common-law jurisdiction within the UAE civil law system. DIFC trusts are recognized internationally and can hold Bitcoin directly or through holding structures. For non-US persons, the UAE is arguably the world's most favorable Bitcoin inheritance jurisdiction: zero estate tax, zero capital gains, mature trust infrastructure, and strong asset protection. For US citizens, the appeal is reduced because the US estate tax follows them regardless. However, UAE-based structures can still be useful for US citizens as part of a broader plan, particularly for non-US beneficiaries.

Switzerland — Cantonal Variation Matters

Swiss residents must choose their canton carefully. The canton of Zug ("Crypto Valley") imposes no inheritance tax between direct heirs and the lowest cantonal taxes in Switzerland. Wealth tax applies to Bitcoin at its year-end market value — for large Bitcoin holders, this creates an annual tax drag that compounds over time. However, Switzerland's legal stability, privacy culture, and world-class custody infrastructure (Xapo, Taurus, various banks) make it attractive for institutional-scale Bitcoin holders who can absorb the wealth tax.

Germany — One-Year Holding Rule

Germany's one-year holding rule (§23 EStG) is one of the most Bitcoin-favorable provisions in European tax law. Bitcoin held by individuals for more than one year is sold completely tax-free — no capital gains tax regardless of amount. For estate purposes, the inherited Bitcoin receives a stepped-up basis in Germany (the date-of-death value becomes the heir's acquisition cost), and if the heir holds for another year, they can sell free of tax. Inheritance tax applies to the full value at death, but the ongoing holding benefit is extraordinary.

Singapore — Trust Infrastructure Leader

Singapore has emerged as Asia's premier Bitcoin estate planning jurisdiction. The combination of no capital gains tax, no estate duty, a sophisticated Trustees Act, the growing Variable Capital Company (VCC) structure for fund vehicles, and access to licensed digital asset custodians makes Singapore uniquely capable of implementing complex multigenerational Bitcoin trusts. For large Bitcoin families with Asian connections, Singapore often dominates the trust domicile analysis.

Renunciation — The Nuclear Option

Some US citizens with very large Bitcoin estates consider the most drastic option: renouncing US citizenship to escape the worldwide estate tax. This is a significant life decision with irreversible consequences, and the tax picture is far more complex than it first appears.

The Exit Tax (IRC §877A)

The US imposes an "expatriation tax" under §877A on covered expatriates — US citizens who renounce citizenship or long-term residents who abandon their green cards. A covered expatriate is anyone who:

For covered expatriates, §877A imposes a mark-to-market exit tax: all worldwide assets are treated as if sold on the day before expatriation at fair market value. Capital gains above an inflation-adjusted exclusion (~$866,000 for 2026) are taxed. For a Bitcoin holder sitting on large unrealized gains, the exit tax can be a multi-million dollar bill paid in cash before they can walk away.

Post-Renunciation Complications

Even after paying the exit tax and renouncing citizenship, complications remain:

When Renunciation Makes Sense (and When It Doesn't)

Renunciation may make sense for a US citizen who: (1) has no intention of returning to the US; (2) has US beneficiaries who are themselves non-US persons or who will renounce; (3) has already substantially paid or reduced the income tax gain on Bitcoin; and (4) can absorb the exit tax cost in exchange for a permanent escape from the worldwide estate tax. It rarely makes sense as a pure estate planning move for someone with large US Bitcoin holdings, a US spouse, or children who are US citizens.

Wyoming Trusts for Americans Abroad

One of the most powerful and underutilized tools for US citizens abroad with Bitcoin wealth is the Wyoming directed trust. Wyoming has established itself as the premier US trust jurisdiction through a combination of legislative innovations that are particularly relevant for Bitcoin holders.

Why Wyoming

Wyoming's trust code offers several features unavailable in most states:

Using Wyoming Trusts from Abroad

A US citizen living in Portugal, UAE, or Singapore can establish a Wyoming directed trust and fund it with Bitcoin. The trust continues to be subject to US estate tax rules (as it is a US-person trust), but it provides the grantor with access to Wyoming's favorable trust law and the directed trust structure's operational benefits. The trust documents are filed in Wyoming; the grantor lives abroad; the Bitcoin can be custodied wherever optimal for security and operational reasons.

For US citizens abroad whose primary concern is operational — how will my heirs actually access this Bitcoin across multiple countries and legal systems? — a Wyoming directed trust provides a structured legal framework that beneficiaries in any country can interact with through the Wyoming trustee, governed by well-understood law, rather than an ad-hoc arrangement with no institutional backing.

Access Without Probate

A properly funded Wyoming trust avoids probate entirely — in Wyoming and, typically, in the decedent's state or country of domicile for trust assets. For an expat with Bitcoin, this means heirs do not need to navigate a foreign probate process to access the trust's Bitcoin. The trustee can distribute pursuant to trust terms without court involvement.

Key Mistakes US Expats Make With Bitcoin Estate Planning

Having worked through the framework, the patterns of failure are predictable. Here are the most common and most costly mistakes:

1. Assuming Foreign Residence Eliminates US Estate Tax

US citizenship, not residency, determines US estate tax exposure. Living in a zero-estate-tax country for 20 years does not reduce your US estate tax liability by a single dollar. This misconception is the foundational error that leads to all subsequent planning failures.

2. Holding Bitcoin on US Exchanges Without NRA-Specific Planning

Foreign nationals with large Bitcoin positions on US exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini) may have created US-situs assets subject to US estate tax with only a $60,000 exemption. Moving to a non-US custodian or holding company structure before the estate tax event is far more straightforward than dealing with the tax after death.

3. Putting Seed Phrases in Wills

This deserves repetition: seed phrases written in wills become public records in probate. A 12- or 24-word seed phrase in a probated will is a theft invitation. Bitcoin access mechanics must be addressed through non-public channels — sealed letters to trustees, encrypted storage, or multi-signature s — never in probate-filed documents.

4. Failing to File FBAR and Form 8938

US persons holding Bitcoin on foreign exchanges who have not been filing FBARs and Form 8938 are exposed to substantial civil (and potentially criminal) penalties. This is a compliance problem that does not go away with time — it compounds. Before any planning, the compliance slate must be cleaned up, ideally with qualified tax counsel.

5. Using a Domestic Will Without International Coordination

A US will governs US assets and may not be recognized, or may require ancillary probate, in a foreign country. An expat with Bitcoin across multiple jurisdictions needs coordinated estate documents — not just a US will, but potentially a separate document recognized in each relevant jurisdiction, all drafted to work together without conflicting provisions.

6. Ignoring Forced Heirship Rules

Many civil-law countries (France, Germany, Spain, and most of Latin America and the Middle East) have forced heirship rules that entitle certain relatives (typically children and spouses) to a Bitcoin family office minimum requirements share of the estate regardless of what the will says. A US expat in France with a Wyoming trust may find that French forced heirship rules apply to their French-domiciled assets — and potentially to their worldwide assets if they are domiciled in France. Bitcoin's situs ambiguity interacts dangerously with forced heirship rules in ways that have not been fully resolved by courts.

7. Conflating Income Tax Planning With Estate Tax Planning

Moving to Portugal to enjoy zero capital gains on Bitcoin is excellent income tax planning. It does nothing for estate tax planning. US citizens in Portugal still owe US estate tax on worldwide assets. Foreign nationals in Portugal still face the NRA situs question on US-exchange-held Bitcoin. Income tax planning and estate tax planning are separate problems requiring separate solutions.

8. Single Points of Failure in Custody

A Bitcoin holder who self-custodies with a single hardware wallet and no documented recovery mechanism — and who lives abroad without family nearby — creates a high-probability inheritance failure. The estate plan is only as good as the practical access mechanism. Multi-signature custody (2-of-3 or 3-of-5) with professionally held key shards, documented in a non-public instruction letter to the trustee, is the operational baseline for international Bitcoin wealth.

Practical Recommendations by Situation

The correct plan depends heavily on who you are, where you live, and where your family is. Here are practical starting points for three common profiles:

Profile A: US Expat With Family in the US

Situation: US citizen living in Singapore or UAE, family (spouse, children) are US citizens or green card holders in the US.

Primary concern: US estate tax on worldwide assets, including foreign-held Bitcoin. Gift and bequest to US-citizen spouse is estate-tax-free (unlimited marital deduction). Bitcoin passing to children creates estate tax exposure.

Recommended framework:

Profile B: US Expat With Family Abroad

Situation: US citizen living in UAE or Portugal, spouse and children are non-US persons living in the same country.

Primary concern: US estate tax on worldwide assets, but the unlimited marital deduction does NOT apply to a non-US-citizen spouse. Gifts to a non-citizen spouse are limited to an annual exclusion (~$185,000 for 2026 indexing). The estate plan must account for this critical asymmetry.

Recommended framework:

Profile C: Foreign National With US-Exchange Bitcoin

Situation: Non-US citizen (German, British, Singaporean) holding substantial Bitcoin on US exchanges. May have visited or lived in the US historically.

Primary concern: NRA estate tax on US-situs assets with only $60,000 exemption. Key question: is exchange-held Bitcoin US-situs?

Recommended framework:

Bitcoin Mining: The Most Powerful Tax Strategy Available

Before your estate is settled, there's an opportunity most Bitcoin holders never consider: mining as a tax strategy. Bitcoin mining generates operational deductions — bonus depreciation, energy costs, equipment write-offs — that can dramatically reduce your taxable estate while building more Bitcoin. It's one of the highest-leverage wealth-building and tax-reduction strategies in the Bitcoin ecosystem.

Explore the Mining Tax Strategy →
⚖️

International Bitcoin Estate Planning — Done Right

Cross-border Bitcoin planning requires specialists who understand both the legal structures and the technical realities. The Bitcoin Family Office works with attorneys, CPAs, and custodians across jurisdictions to build estate plans that actually work — including the custody mechanics that most plans ignore.

View Our Services →
Hal Franklin
Bitcoin Estate Planning Analyst · The Bitcoin Family Office
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Bitcoin estate planning, international tax law, and cross-border wealth planning are complex areas that vary significantly based on individual circumstances and evolve with regulatory changes. Nothing in this article should be relied upon as a substitute for qualified legal or tax counsel in your specific jurisdiction. Consult a licensed attorney, CPA, or tax advisor familiar with international estate planning and digital assets before taking any action based on information in this article. Laws and regulations referenced may have changed since publication.

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