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Richard Knight, ACSI

Service

Estate Planning.

Multiple jurisdictions. One coherent estate plan.

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Who this is for

People who typically come to me about this.

  • Persona 1

    British expats with Thai property

    Own a Thai condo or have other Thai-situated assets, want to make sure your spouse or beneficiary receives them efficiently.

  • Persona 2

    Long-term UK residents with global estates

    Still within UK Inheritance Tax scope under the post-April-2025 long-term-residence test despite years in Thailand, exposed on the worldwide estate, want to plan around it.

  • Persona 3

    Blended-family expats

    Children from prior relationships, Thai spouse, want clarity on what will pass to whom.

What's involved

How the work actually plays out.

A British expat resident in Thailand for twenty years can still fall within the scope of UK inheritance tax. From 6 April 2025 that scope follows long-term residence, not domicile, and that single fact decides whether HMRC takes 40% of the worldwide estate or none of the Thai-situated one. The work is building the two-jurisdiction will set, the lifetime gifts strategy where it makes sense, and the documentation that makes the worst day procedurally clean for the family.

Long-term residence vs domicile

From 6 April 2025, the scope of UK inheritance tax follows long-term residence, not domicile. Broadly, ten of the previous twenty UK tax years of residence brings the worldwide estate into scope, and the exposure can persist for several years after you leave the UK.

Diagnosing where you genuinely sit under that test is the first task. Most of the value is in being honest about it early rather than finding it out through the estate.

Two-will drafting

A Thai will scoped to Thai-situated assets and a UK will scoped to UK-situated assets, drafted to talk to each other and not contradict. This is the structural fix to the 12-to-18-month probate delays that single-global-will expats routinely experience.

Common mistakes

Where this most often goes sideways.

  • Relying on a single global will.

    Thai courts treat foreign wills inconsistently. A single document purporting to cover both UK and Thai assets is a recipe for years of administrative limbo. The fix is a two-will set drafted in coordination.

  • Treating departure as an automatic exit.

    Long-term-resident status, not your current address, decides the inheritance-tax scope. The exposure can persist for several years after you leave the UK. Assuming departure ended it creates the worst kind of IHT surprise.

How I work on this

The process, in three steps.

  1. 01

    Diagnose residence status

    A written assessment of your long-term-resident position under the post-April-2025 test and the practical IHT exposure that follows.

  2. 02

    Coordinate with the lawyers

    I work with your UK and Thai solicitors on the drafting, I do not draft wills directly.

  3. 03

    Document the estate plan

    A written estate-plan summary for the family, with the executor sequence laid out clearly.

Fees and what to expect

Plain-English fee transparency.

  • I am paid through commission on the products arranged and an ongoing fee on the assets managed. Every cost, and what it pays, is set out in writing before you decide.

  • You may ask what any recommendation pays me, and the figures that apply are agreed in writing in the engagement letter before you proceed.

  • A first 30-minute consultation costs nothing and obliges you to nothing.

  • Client assets are held in your own name on FCA-regulated platforms or SEC-licensed brokers, never by me.

Questions

Questions about this.

Begin a conversation.

Thirty minutes, by Zoom or in person at the Bangkok, Hua Hin or Pattaya office. Free, and without obligation. You leave with a clearer view of what is in front of you, whether or not the work proceeds.

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Thirty minutes with Richard Knight, ACSI directly. By video, phone, or in person. No obligation.

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How can I help?

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A retired expat reading the playbook in Thailand

Free guide

The 2026 expat in Thailand tax and pension playbook.

Richard Knight · richardknightuk.com

Free · About 12 minutes to read

The 2026 expat in Thailand tax and pension playbook.

The 2024 Thai remittance rules changed how pension income is taxed. What that means for you, what a QROPS really does, and the moves that compound over the next five years.

The guide opens on this page. No follow-up unless you ask.