Cross-Border Wills & Estates Americas

Americas.

Cross-border wills, estates, and inheritance tax memoranda — North, Central, and South America.

Region

North, Central & South America

Legal families

Common law (Canada, USA)
Civil law (Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Colombia)

Jurisdictions covered

6

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The Americas span common-law jurisdictions (Canada, the United States) and a large family of civil-law jurisdictions descended from the Spanish and Portuguese codes (Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, and others). Estates that cross between these systems must reconcile two fundamentally different inheritance traditions: testamentary freedom under common law against forced heirship — legítima, herederos forzosos — under civil law.

They must also navigate divergent estate, gift, inheritance, and capital-gains tax regimes — including the United States’ situs-based estate tax on non-resident aliens, Canada’s deemed-disposition regime at death, and the absence of inheritance tax in some Latin American jurisdictions paired with significant ganancias ocasionales or impuesto de sucesiones at the state or provincial level.

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  • Reconciling forced heirship (legítima, herederos forzosos) with common-law testamentary freedom.
  • Estates spanning a Canadian or US settlor with Latin American heirs, or vice versa.
  • US federal estate tax exposure on real and tangible property held by non-resident aliens (situs rules under §§ 2103–2108).
  • Canada’s deemed disposition under ITA s. 70(5), and how foreign credits interact with foreign inheritance and capital-gains taxes.
  • Recognition of common-law trusts in civil-law jurisdictions that do not recognize the trust as a legal form.
  • Provincial- and state-level inheritance and gift taxes (ITCMD in Brazil; ITGB in Buenos Aires; US state estate taxes) where no federal estate tax exists.
  • Matrimonial property regimes — sociedad conyugal, sociedad de gananciales, separación de bienes — and their effect on the estate base.
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