Cross-Border Wills & Estates Americas United States

United States.

The United States imposes federal estate, gift, and generation-skipping transfer tax under IRC Title 26, Chapters 11–13. Following the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Pub. L. 119-21, July 2025), the basic exclusion is set at $15 million from 1 January 2026, with portability of the deceased spousal unused exclusion under § 2010(c). The headline rate remains 40%.

For non-resident aliens, only US-situs assets are taxed — but with a $60,000 exemption rather than the $15 million available to citizens and domiciliaries. Cross-border planning hinges on the seventeen jurisdictions with which the United States has bilateral estate-tax treaties (Canada among them), the QDOT regime under § 2056A for non-citizen surviving spouses, the foreign-trust reporting regime, and the § 877A exit tax for covered expatriates.

The memoranda in this series address the recurring fact patterns in US cross-border estate planning — including NRA situs analysis, QDOT mechanics, Subchapter J on foreign trusts, PFIC and CFC overlay for foreign investments, the § 2801 transfer tax on gifts and bequests from covered expatriates, and the interaction between US federal tax and state-level estate taxes in New York, Massachusetts, Oregon, Washington, Hawaii, among others.

Legal system

Common law (Louisiana is mixed)

Key statutes

IRC Title 26 (federal)
EPTL (New York)
Probate Code (California)
State law (50 states)

Inheritance-tax rate

Federal estate tax up to 40%;
BEA $15M from 2026 (OBBBA)

Estate treaty — Canada

Canada–US 1980 Treaty

Estate treaty — United States

N/A

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