My executor lives abroad
In short
An executor based abroad can still act, but distance makes administration slower and can create tax and logistical complications. They can appoint an attorney in England and Wales to act for them, or have power reserved while a UK-based co-executor handles the day-to-day work. Planning for this in advance avoids delays.
The situation
One of your executors lives, or will live, outside the UK.
What happens legally
There is no rule against an overseas executor, but practicalities and tax matter:
- An executor abroad can act, but must usually deal with UK probate, banks and HMRC from a distance.
- They can appoint an attorney in England and Wales to act on their behalf for the administration.
- Where there are co-executors, the overseas one can have power reserved, letting a UK-based executor proceed.
- An executor's tax residence can sometimes affect the estate's tax position, so advice may be needed.
The risks
- Distance and time zones can slow probate and asset collection.
- Signing and witnessing documents from abroad adds delay and cost.
- Residence issues can create unexpected tax complications.
Recommended actions
- Where possible, appoint at least one UK-based executor.
- Consider whether the overseas executor should appoint an attorney or reserve power.
- Plan for document signing, identity checks and posting from abroad.
- Take advice if executor residence could affect tax.
Sources
- Non-Contentious Probate Rules 1987 — legislation.gov.uk
- GOV.UK — Applying for probate
- HMRC — Inheritance Tax guidance
- Reviewed by
- ClearLegacy editorial team
- Last reviewed
- June 2026
- Next review
- December 2026
- Jurisdiction
- England & Wales
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