Resident, Residency - Expert Expatriate Financial Advice

Where you are resiident is crucial to taxResident

For most countries, including the UK, you are resident if you live in that country for 183 days or more in a given tax year. This is different to your Domicile.

The UK tax year runs from 6 April to 5 April in the following calendar year.

For many other countries, the tax year is 1 January to 31 December.   Some countries, but not many, have other dates.

UK Residency

  • If you are resident in the UK, you are subject to UK taxation laws.
  • If you are not resident but have assets there, those assets are subject to UK taxation laws.
  • The days of arrival and departure are generally ignored, although a ruling in 2006 said that the day of arrival and departure should be counted as one day in total.
  • The number of days you spend in the UK are accumulated over the year and if you reach 183 days, you are resident in the UK for tax purposes.
  • If you arrive with the intention of staying in the UK for more than 183 days, you are resident for tax purposes on day one.
  • If you live outside the UK for over 183 days, you are not resident.  This does not mean you can move overseas for one year and be free of income or capital or inheritance taxes.  You would still be deemed ordinarily resident and therefore subject to capital taxes.   You would also still be UK domiciled and subject to inheritance taxes.
Residency test for days that do not count: If you are in the UK at Midnight on any given day, this counts towards the numbers of days as a resident. Days that you are in transit, even if say you land in the UK pass through passport control and the get on a train and then a ferry two days later to another country do not count, provided teh only reason you were here was that you are in transit.

UK Ordinarily Resident

If you move overseas for a period of time and become a non-resident, you may still be deemed ordinarily resident for tax purposes. 

For example, you cannot simply move overseas for a year, sell your portfolio of rental property investments and avoid capital gains taxes.

Losing UK Ordinarily Resident Status

If you habitually visit the UK after you have left and spend too much time in the UK, you will still be deemed ordinarily resident and subject to capital taxes.

  • 91 Day, 4 Year Rule - Broadly speaking, if you spend 91 days or more each year for four consecutive years in the UK, you retain Ordinarily Resident status.
  • 5 Year - At the 5th year, you would become ordinarily resident overseas and not subject to capital taxes.
  • Deliberate Intention - You must clearly be able to demonstrate that you do not intend to make habitual and substantial visits to the UK

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