Table of Contents
- Who Is a Non-Resident Alien for US Estate Tax Purposes
- The $60,000 Problem: NRA Estate Tax Exposure
- Is Bitcoin a US-Situs Asset?
- Estate Tax Treaties: Countries With Better Protection
- 5 Structuring Strategies for Non-Resident Aliens
- The Foreign Corporation Solution in Detail
- The Cold Storage Situs Strategy
- US Life Insurance as Estate Tax Hedge
- Common Mistakes Non-Resident Aliens Make
- NRA Bitcoin Estate Planning Checklist
- Frequently Asked Questions
Who Is a Non-Resident Alien for US Estate Tax Purposes
The US estate and gift tax system uses a concept called "domicile" — not residency or citizenship — to determine whether a person is subject to US estate tax on their worldwide assets or only their US-situs assets.
A person is a US domiciliary (and thus subject to worldwide estate tax) if they live in the US and intend to remain there indefinitely. A non-resident alien (NRA) for US estate tax purposes is anyone who is neither a US citizen nor a US domiciliary at the time of death.
Key Distinctions
| Category | US Estate Tax Applies To | Exemption (2024) | Top Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| US Citizens (anywhere in world) | Worldwide assets | $13.61 million | 40% |
| US Domiciliaries (non-citizen) | Worldwide assets | $13.61 million | 40% |
| Non-Resident Aliens | US-situs assets only | $60,000 | 40% |
| NRAs with applicable treaty | US-situs assets only | Pro-rata share of full exemption or treaty-specific amount | 40% (on excess) |
Note: The Green Card Test for income tax does not automatically apply to estate tax. A long-term Green Card holder who has established domicile outside the US may still be subject to the worldwide estate tax rules. Conversely, a frequent US visitor who spends 6 months per year in the US may have established US domicile despite not being a resident for income tax purposes.
The $60,000 Problem: NRA Estate Tax Exposure
The $60,000 exemption for non-resident aliens on US-situs assets was set by statute decades ago and has never been indexed for inflation. In practical terms, it is nearly worthless for any Bitcoin holder with meaningful assets.
The US estate tax rate schedule for amounts above the $60,000 NRA exemption escalates quickly:
| Taxable US Estate (Above $60K) | Rate | Tax on This Bracket |
|---|---|---|
| $0 -- $10,000 | 18% | $1,800 |
| $10,001 -- $20,000 | 20% | $2,000 |
| $20,001 -- $40,000 | 22% | $4,400 |
| $40,001 -- $60,000 | 24% | $4,800 |
| $60,001 -- $80,000 | 26% | $5,200 |
| $80,001 -- $100,000 | 28% | $5,600 |
| $100,001 -- $150,000 | 30% | $15,000 |
| $150,001 -- $250,000 | 32% | $32,000 |
| $250,001 -- $500,000 | 34% | $85,000 |
| $500,001 -- $750,000 | 37% | $92,500 |
| $750,001 -- $1,000,000 | 39% | $97,500 |
| Over $1,000,000 | 40% | 40 cents on every dollar |
Real-World NRA Bitcoin Exposure Examples
| Bitcoin Position | BTC Price | Portfolio Value | Taxable Estate (after $60K) | Estimated US Estate Tax |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 BTC on Coinbase | $85,000 | $425,000 | $365,000 | ~$108,000 |
| 25 BTC on Coinbase | $85,000 | $2,125,000 | $2,065,000 | ~$802,000 |
| 10 BTC on Coinbase | $150,000 | $1,500,000 | $1,440,000 | ~$556,000 |
| 50 BTC on Coinbase | $150,000 | $7,500,000 | $7,440,000 | ~$2,976,000 |
| 100 BTC on Coinbase | $200,000 | $20,000,000 | $19,940,000 | ~$7,976,000 |
These numbers illustrate why US estate tax planning is urgent for any non-resident alien with meaningful Bitcoin holdings on US platforms. At $200,000 per Bitcoin, a 100 BTC position could generate nearly $8 million in US estate tax owed by the heirs — from an account held by someone who never lived in the United States.
Is Bitcoin a US-Situs Asset?
The threshold question for NRA Bitcoin holders is whether their Bitcoin qualifies as a US-situs asset. The IRS has not issued specific guidance on Bitcoin situs for estate tax purposes, which creates both uncertainty and planning opportunity.
The General Situs Rules for Intangible Property
Under established estate tax principles, the situs of intangible personal property is generally determined by where the underlying right or obligation is located — typically where the debtor or issuer is located. For stock in a US corporation, situs is the US regardless of where the certificate is held. For bank accounts, situs generally follows the branch where the account is maintained.
Bitcoin presents a novel challenge because it is not an obligation of any entity. It exists on a decentralized ledger accessible globally. The key situs questions for Bitcoin include:
- Exchange-held Bitcoin: If Bitcoin is held on a US-based exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini), the exchange is a US entity and the Bitcoin is essentially a claim against that US entity. Strong argument that this is a US-situs asset.
- Bitcoin held by a US custodian: Similar to exchange-held Bitcoin — if the custodian is a US entity, the Bitcoin likely has US situs for estate tax purposes.
- Bitcoin in cold storage, keys held outside US: If the private keys are held entirely outside the US with no US entity involvement, the situs argument for non-US location is stronger, though not definitively established.
- Bitcoin held through a foreign corporation: If a non-US resident holds Bitcoin through a foreign corporation, the estate tax asset is the stock in the foreign corporation, not the underlying Bitcoin. Foreign stock is generally not a US-situs asset.
- Bitcoin held through a US LLC or trust: US entity interests may have US situs, creating potential NRA estate tax exposure even if the underlying Bitcoin is otherwise structurable.
IRS Notice and Regulatory Risk
The IRS could issue guidance at any time characterizing Bitcoin as having US situs based on exchange location, custodian domicile, or other factors. Non-resident aliens relying on cold storage situs arguments should be aware that this position carries regulatory risk. Planning through a foreign corporate structure is more legally definitive than cold storage situs arguments alone.
Estate Tax Treaties: Countries With Better Protection
The US has estate and gift tax treaties with approximately 16 countries. These treaties typically provide nationals of the treaty country with either a specified exemption amount or a pro-rata share of the full US estate tax exemption (calculated as the proportion of the decedent's worldwide estate that consists of US-situs assets).
US Estate Tax Treaty Countries
Nationals of these countries are generally entitled to a pro-rata exemption calculated as:
Available Exemption = Full US Exemption × (US-Situs Assets ÷ Worldwide Assets)
For example: A UK national with $10 million in worldwide assets, of which $2 million is Bitcoin on Coinbase (US-situs), would have an available exemption of approximately $2.72 million ($13.61M × $2M/$10M) rather than just $60,000. This could eliminate US estate tax entirely on the $2 million Bitcoin position.
| Country | Has Treaty? | Approximate Benefit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | Yes | Pro-rata full exemption | One of the most favorable treaties |
| Germany | Yes | Pro-rata full exemption | Strong treaty protection |
| Canada | Yes | Pro-rata full exemption | Applies to all Canadian citizens and residents |
| Australia | Yes | Pro-rata full exemption | Australia has no inheritance tax domestically |
| France | Yes | Pro-rata full exemption | Also consider French inheritance tax separately |
| Singapore | No | $60,000 only | Singapore abolished estate tax in 2008; US exposure remains |
| UAE | No | $60,000 only | Large Bitcoin community; no treaty protection |
| Hong Kong | No | $60,000 only | HK abolished estate duty; US exposure remains |
| Brazil | No | $60,000 only | Structuring essential for US Bitcoin positions |
| El Salvador | No | $60,000 only | Growing Bitcoin economy; no US treaty |
5 Structuring Strategies for Non-Resident Aliens
The goal of NRA Bitcoin estate planning is straightforward: minimize or eliminate the amount of Bitcoin that qualifies as a US-situs asset at death. Here are the five primary strategies, ranked by legal certainty and common usage.
Strategy 1: Foreign Corporation Structure
The most legally definitive approach. The NRA forms a foreign corporation (often in a zero-tax jurisdiction) and holds Bitcoin through the corporation. At death, the decedent's estate contains shares in a foreign corporation — not Bitcoin directly. Foreign corporation stock is generally not a US-situs asset, regardless of where the underlying Bitcoin is held or managed.
Strategy 2: Move Off US Exchanges
Bitcoin held on non-US exchanges (Kraken's non-US entity, offshore platforms, etc.) or in self-custody with keys entirely outside the US presents the weakest case for US situs. While not legally certain, moving Bitcoin to cold storage with keys held in a non-US jurisdiction removes the clearest indicator of US situs (US custodian/exchange relationship).
Strategy 3: Foreign Grantor Trust
A foreign grantor trust established in a favorable jurisdiction (Cayman Islands, Cook Islands, BVI) can hold Bitcoin on behalf of the NRA. Properly structured, the trust assets are not included in the NRA's US taxable estate. This strategy also provides asset protection and privacy benefits.
Strategy 4: US Life Insurance Policy
For NRAs who cannot or choose not to restructure their Bitcoin holdings, US life insurance policies can provide a tax-free death benefit to cover estimated US estate tax liability. Proceeds from US life insurance are generally includable in the estate but may receive preferential treatment depending on how the policy is structured. Offshore life insurance (PPLI) may provide even more favorable treatment.
Strategy 5: Spousal QTIP Trust or Marital Deduction
If the NRA is married to a US citizen, the unlimited marital deduction eliminates US estate tax on assets left to the US citizen spouse. If married to a non-citizen spouse, a Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT) is required to receive the marital deduction. A QDOT allows deferral of US estate tax until the surviving non-citizen spouse's death.
| Strategy | Legal Certainty | Complexity | Cost to Implement | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Foreign corporation | High | Moderate | $5,000 -- $15,000 | Holders with $500K+ Bitcoin |
| Move off US exchanges | Moderate | Low | Minimal | All NRA Bitcoin holders |
| Foreign grantor trust | High | High | $15,000 -- $50,000+ | Holders with $1M+ Bitcoin; multi-generational planning |
| US life insurance | High (as hedge) | Low -- Moderate | Premium-based | NRAs unable to restructure |
| QDOT (married NRA) | High | Moderate | $3,000 -- $10,000 | NRAs with non-citizen spouse |
The Foreign Corporation Solution in Detail
The foreign corporation strategy deserves detailed treatment because it is the most commonly recommended approach for NRAs with substantial Bitcoin positions on US exchanges.
How It Works
- The NRA incorporates a company in a favorable offshore jurisdiction (British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, and Bahamas are common choices for simplicity and low cost)
- The NRA transfers their Bitcoin to the foreign corporation (this may or may not be a taxable event depending on their home country's tax rules)
- The NRA holds the shares of the foreign corporation personally
- At death, the estate contains shares in a foreign corporation, not Bitcoin on a US exchange
- Foreign corporation shares are generally not US-situs assets for estate tax purposes
Important Caveats
- US shareholders of foreign corporations: If any US persons own more than 10% of the foreign corporation, complex Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) rules may apply and should be reviewed by US tax counsel.
- The corporation must have substance: A foreign corporation that exists only on paper with no economic substance may be challenged. Maintaining proper corporate records, a registered agent in the jurisdiction, and real decision-making outside the US adds substance.
- Home country tax rules: Transfer of Bitcoin to a foreign corporation may trigger home country capital gains tax or gift tax. Analyze both US and home country tax implications before restructuring.
- Bitcoin custody inside the corporation: The foreign corporation still needs a custodial solution for the Bitcoin — cold storage with a non-US custodian is common. Multi-signature arrangements can maintain security while keeping keys outside the US.
- Annual compliance: Foreign corporations typically require annual filing fees, registered agent fees, and maintenance of corporate records. Budget $1,000 -- $3,000 per year for ongoing compliance.
Choosing a Jurisdiction
| Jurisdiction | Annual Cost | Privacy | Reputation | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| British Virgin Islands (BVI) | $1,000 -- $2,000 | High | Very Good | Most common; widely accepted by banks and exchanges |
| Cayman Islands | $2,000 -- $4,000 | High | Excellent | Institutional-grade; preferred for larger structures |
| Bahamas | $1,500 -- $3,000 | Good | Good | Good option for Caribbean structures |
| Seychelles | $500 -- $1,500 | Good | Moderate | Low cost; some exchange/banking limitations |
| Singapore (Pte Ltd) | $2,000 -- $5,000 | Moderate | Excellent | Asia-Pacific base; strong regulatory framework |
The Cold Storage Situs Strategy
Moving Bitcoin off US-based exchanges and into self-custody with keys held entirely outside the US is the lowest-cost strategy available to NRAs. While legally less certain than the foreign corporation approach, it addresses the most obvious US-situs indicator: a US entity holding the Bitcoin on the NRA's behalf.
Implementation Steps
- Withdraw Bitcoin from US-based exchanges to a hardware wallet
- Generate and store private keys in a non-US jurisdiction (where you live or another trusted non-US location)
- Do not use US-based custodians, Bitcoin IRAs, or US trust companies for custody
- Document the key storage location in your estate plan so heirs can access the Bitcoin
- Consider a multi-signature setup using signatories in multiple non-US jurisdictions
The limitation of this approach is legal uncertainty. Until the IRS issues definitive guidance on Bitcoin situs, the cold storage argument carries risk. For positions above $500,000, the foreign corporation structure provides a more defensible legal position.
US Life Insurance as Estate Tax Hedge
For NRAs who cannot restructure existing Bitcoin holdings (perhaps due to exchange lockup, pending legal proceedings, or simply the time required to set up a foreign structure), US life insurance provides an immediate hedge against the estate tax liability.
The strategy: purchase a life insurance policy with a death benefit roughly equal to the anticipated US estate tax. The policy proceeds are paid to beneficiaries outside the taxable estate (if structured via an irrevocable life insurance trust, or ILIT), providing liquidity to pay any US estate tax without forcing a Bitcoin sale.
Private Placement Life Insurance (PPLI)
High-net-worth NRAs should also consider Private Placement Life Insurance, a sophisticated structure typically available to those with $2 million or more in investable assets. PPLI allows the policyholder to invest in a broad range of assets — potentially including Bitcoin -- inside a life insurance wrapper, with death benefits passing tax-free and potential income tax deferral on internal growth during the insured's lifetime.
PPLI is typically issued by offshore insurance companies in jurisdictions like Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, or Cayman Islands. It requires careful compliance with IRS investor control rules to maintain its tax-advantaged status.
Common Mistakes Non-Resident Aliens Make
1. Assuming "I Don't Live in America, So US Tax Doesn't Apply to Me"
The most common and costly mistake. The US estate tax applies to US-situs assets regardless of the owner's residence or citizenship. A resident of Singapore, Dubai, London, or Tokyo with Bitcoin on Coinbase has US estate tax exposure.
2. Using US-Based Bitcoin IRAs Without Understanding the Consequences
Bitcoin IRA structures (BitcoinIRA.com, Alto IRA, iTrust Capital) are US-based custodians. An NRA who invests in a Bitcoin IRA typically has a clear US-situs asset equal to the full IRA value. The benefits of the IRA structure (tax deferral) may not outweigh the estate tax exposure for NRAs without treaty protection.
3. Failing to Update Beneficiary Designations
Exchange accounts and custodial accounts rarely have beneficiary designations accepted across international borders the same way US accounts do. An NRA dying with Bitcoin on Coinbase may have their estate subject to US probate proceedings to establish the right to the account, adding cost, delay, and publicity to the transfer.
4. Not Accounting for the Foreign Tax Credit Gap
The US estate tax may be partially offset by a foreign death duty credit — but only if the decedent's home country also imposes a death tax on US-situs assets. Many high-Bitcoin jurisdictions (Singapore, UAE, Hong Kong, UAE) have zero estate or inheritance tax, meaning there is no foreign credit to offset the US tax.
5. Waiting Until It's Too Late
Death is, by definition, unplanned. NRAs who intend to "deal with it later" often die before restructuring. Setting up a foreign corporation and transferring Bitcoin takes weeks to months. Reviewing and updating exchange account beneficiary information takes hours. The time to act is now, while Bitcoin values are known and health permits careful planning.
6. Ignoring the Marital Deduction Complication
A US citizen spouse can inherit any amount from a US citizen or domiciliary estate tax-free under the unlimited marital deduction. But when both spouses are non-US citizens, this deduction is not available — or is only available through a QDOT, which defers rather than eliminates the tax. NRA married couples holding significant Bitcoin should understand this limitation and plan accordingly.
NRA Bitcoin Estate Planning Checklist
- ☐ Determine whether you are a non-resident alien for US estate tax purposes (consult a US estate tax attorney)
- ☐ Identify all US-situs Bitcoin positions: exchange accounts, custodial accounts, US-entity interests
- ☐ Determine whether your home country has an estate/gift tax treaty with the US
- ☐ Calculate current US estate tax exposure (US-situs Bitcoin value minus $60,000 exemption, or pro-rata treaty exemption)
- ☐ For positions above $100,000: evaluate foreign corporation structure
- ☐ For positions above $500,000: engage a US international estate tax attorney
- ☐ Review Bitcoin held on US exchanges: consider moving to non-US custodian or cold storage
- ☐ Create a letter of instructions for heirs including exchange accounts, custodians, and key locations
- ☐ Review whether US-based Bitcoin IRAs are appropriate for your NRA status
- ☐ If married to a non-citizen, review QDOT requirements for any US-situs assets
- ☐ Document all planning steps and maintain annual compliance for any foreign structure
- ☐ Revisit planning annually as Bitcoin value changes and IRS guidance evolves
NRA Gift Tax Rules: A Critical Difference
Unlike US citizens and domiciliaries who pay gift tax on worldwide transfers, non-resident aliens only pay US gift tax on transfers of US-situs tangible personal property. Critically, the IRS has historically treated intangible property (including US stocks and, arguably, Bitcoin) as exempt from US gift tax for NRAs.
This creates a potential planning window: if Bitcoin is considered intangible property (likely, given its nature as a blockchain entry rather than a physical asset), an NRA may be able to gift Bitcoin to heirs during their lifetime without triggering US gift tax -- even for large amounts. This is a significant departure from the estate tax treatment, where Bitcoin on a US exchange may have US situs and be subject to US estate tax. The disparity between lifetime gifting and estate tax treatment makes early planning especially valuable for NRAs.
Consult a US international tax attorney before relying on this distinction, as the characterization of Bitcoin as tangible versus intangible property for gift tax purposes is not definitively settled.
For foundational estate planning concepts, see our guides on Bitcoin estate planning overview, Bitcoin dynasty trusts, Bitcoin custody architecture for families, Bitcoin gift tax strategies, and how to put Bitcoin in a trust.
This guide is updated regularly as IRS guidance on digital asset situs evolves, estate tax treaty positions are clarified, and international Bitcoin custody practices mature. It reflects the law as of February 2026. This is not legal, tax, or financial advice. Non-resident aliens with US Bitcoin exposure should consult a qualified US international tax attorney and cross-border estate planning specialist before implementing any strategy described here.
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