For many expatriates, building pension wealth across multiple jurisdictions creates both opportunity and complexity.
While working internationally often leads to higher earning potential and diversified assets, it also raises important questions around taxation, currency exposure, and long-term retirement planning.
At Private Client Consultancy, we ensure that your financial structure reflects your life as it is today.
In this comprehensive guide, we detail exactly how to navigate cross-border wealth management to ensure your retirement is secure, compliant, and tax-efficient.
The landscape for expatriate wealth planning is undergoing a seismic shift.
The UK government’s reforms to Inheritance Tax (IHT), effective from 6 April 2027, mean that many offshore pension structures will no longer enjoy the blanket exemptions they once did.
Specifically, UK-registered schemes like International SIPPs and offshore structures like QNUPS are expected to fall within the scope of UK IHT upon the death of the policyholder.
The treatment of QROPSÂ remains highly dependent on the exact scheme structure and your long-term residency status.
For a deeper dive into these specific legislative shifts, we recommend reviewing our dedicated briefing on UK Inheritance Tax Changes in 2027: What Expats with Pension-Held Property Need to Know.
"The April 2027 IHT reform is the single biggest conversation we are having with our UK expat clients right now.
The days of simply parking funds in a QNUPS and forgetting about them are over. We are actively stress-testing our clients' portfolios to ensure their estate planning remains robust under the new legislation."
Understanding the terminology is the first step in taking control of your cross-border wealth.
Offshore pension structures are not standard bank accounts; they are highly regulated legal wrappers designed to hold your retirement assets tax-efficiently outside your country of origin.
Depending on your jurisdiction and retirement goals, you will typically utilise one of three primary vehicles.
What is a QROPS? A Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pension Scheme (QROPS) is an HMRC-approved offshore pension structure designed for individuals permanently transferring their UK pension benefits overseas.
It allows expats to consolidate funds, invest in multiple currencies, and mitigate future UK tax liabilities, provided they remain outside the UK for a minimum of 10 full tax years.
You can learn more about the mechanics of these transfers in our guide, Explaining A QROPS: Making Pension Transfers Easy.
What is a QNUPS? A Qualifying Non-UK Pension Scheme (QNUPS) is an overseas pension vehicle used primarily for holding international investments and long-term estate planning.
While it historically offered an exemption from UK Inheritance Tax without formal contribution limits, expats must now strictly factor in the upcoming April 2027 IHT reforms when considering this structure for wealth preservation.
For further details, read QNUPS: Qualifying Non-UK Pension Scheme Explained.
What is an International SIPP? An International SIPP is a UK-registered, FCA-regulated pension wrapper specifically tailored for non-UK residents.
It allows expats to manage their UK pension pots from abroad with multi-currency investment options, making it the ideal bridging structure for those who intend to eventually return to the UK.
We cover this extensively in What Is an International SIPP? A Complete Guide for UK Expats (2026).
With several options available, determining the right path requires a clear understanding of how each wrapper functions.
Your ideal structure depends heavily on your current residency status, your long-term retirement destination, and your estate planning goals.
We have developed the following matrix to help you quickly compare the core features of the most common expatriate pension structures.
Feature | QROPS | QNUPS | International SIPP |
Primary Use Case | Permanent relocation away from the UK | High-net-worth estate planning | Expats retaining UK ties or planning to return |
UK Pension Transfers | Yes, direct transfers allowed | Rarely used for direct transfers | Yes, fully FCA regulated |
Currency Options | Multi-currency (EUR, USD, etc.) | Multi-currency | Multi-currency |
IHT Status (Post-April 2027) | Subject to structural review | Expected to fall within UK IHT scope | Expected to fall within UK IHT scope |
Regulatory Oversight | Local jurisdiction | Local jurisdiction | UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) |
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"A common trap I see expats fall into is assuming a QROPS is always the superior choice because it sits completely outside the UK.
If you plan to return to the UK in the next five to ten years, an International SIPP is often much more flexible and cost-effective. We never recommend a structure without knowing where you intend to spend your final retirement years."
While the benefits of offshore wealth management are significant, these structures are not a universal solution for every expatriate.
Deciding to move your pension offshore must be a strategic choice based on your specific financial footprint.
Assessing your suitability early in the planning phase ensures you do not trigger unnecessary fees or give up valuable domestic guarantees.
Offshore solutions provide immense value for individuals who have permanently relocated abroad and hold significant pension wealth across different jurisdictions.
They are highly suitable if you are approaching the UK lifetime allowance limits, require your retirement income paid in a different currency like Euros or US Dollars, or need to uncouple your wealth from UK legislative volatility.
Offshore transfers are generally unsuitable for expats on short-term secondments (under five years) who plan to return home.
Furthermore, if you hold a highly valuable UK public sector Defined Benefit (final salary) scheme, such as the NHS or Teachers’ Pension, transferring offshore usually means giving up guaranteed, inflation-linked income.
Finally, for very small pension pots, the setup and administrative fees of an offshore wrapper will rapidly erode the tax benefits.
The intersection of multiple tax jurisdictions creates a minefield of potential administrative and financial errors.
Misunderstanding the rules can lead to severe penalties from tax authorities, which is why we must address the most common misconceptions head-on.
Proper planning requires separating fact from fiction.
The Myth: Moving your pension to a zero-tax jurisdiction means you pay no tax on withdrawal.
The Reality: Your tax liability is dictated by your country of residence when you draw the income, not just where the pension is housed.
The Myth: Any offshore transfer protects you from the UK taxman.
The Reality: If your new country of residence does not have a robust DTA with the UK, you could face taxation in both jurisdictions.
The Myth: You can move your pension anywhere in the world without penalty.
The Reality: If you transfer a UK pension to a QROPS located outside the country where you are tax resident, HMRC will levy a 25% tax charge on the entire transfer value.
The Myth: Offshore banks offer the same guarantees as UK institutions.
The Reality: Leaving the UK means leaving the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS). You must ensure your offshore jurisdiction has an equivalent, robust depositor protection framework.
"Last year, we reviewed a portfolio for a client in Portugal who had transferred their pension without checking the Double Taxation Agreement.
They were unknowingly triggering tax liabilities in both jurisdictions. Reversing these decisions is incredibly costly, which is why cross-border tax alignment must be step one, not an afterthought."
Transparency is critical in cross-border wealth management. While exact fees depend on the size of your portfolio and the complexity of the underlying investments, expats should expect three main layers of costs:
"Last year, we reviewed a portfolio for a client in Portugal who had transferred their pension without checking the Double Taxation Agreement.
They were unknowingly triggering tax liabilities in both jurisdictions. Reversing these decisions is incredibly costly, which is why cross-border tax alignment must be step one, not an afterthought."
The administrative process requires strict regulatory compliance. Here is how a professional transfer is executed, a process we outline further in Expat Overseas Pension Transfers: A Clearer Way to Think About Your Retirement:
A recent client of ours, James, had spent over 25 years working in the UK before permanently relocating to Spain.
He had accumulated a substantial UK pension pot and initially assumed leaving everything in the UK would be the safest option. (For a broader look at this demographic, see our article Expat Pension Advice: A Guide for UK Pensioners in Spain and the EU).
Upon review, we identified two severe risks.
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After detailed analysis, we transferred his pension into an International SIPP. This structure allowed James to immediately convert his assets into Euro-denominated investments, entirely eliminating his GBP/EUR currency risk.
Furthermore, by structuring his withdrawals using specific Spanish tax-compliant investment bonds within the SIPP, we significantly reduced his annual tax liability in Spain while keeping the setup costs well below 1.2% per annum.
No.
The UK State Pension cannot be transferred or commuted into a lump sum.
However, you can have your UK State Pension paid directly into an overseas bank account in the local currency, though it will only increase annually if you live in a country with a reciprocal agreement with the UK.
If you hold an International SIPP, returning to the UK is seamless as the structure is already UK-regulated.
If you hold a QROPS and return to the UK, the funds fall back under standard UK tax rules, and any future withdrawals will be taxed as UK income.
You are exempt from the 25% OTC if you transfer your pension to a QROPS based in the exact same country where you are tax resident.
You are also exempt if both you and the QROPS are located within the European Economic Area (EEA).
Under current HMRC rules, you cannot access funds transferred from a UK pension until you reach age 55. This minimum pension age will rise to 57 in 2028. Accessing funds earlier will trigger an unauthorised payment charge of up to 55%.
Traditional UK pensions mandate that your funds remain in Sterling. An offshore wrapper operates with open architecture, allowing you to hold cash and invest in assets denominated in Euros, US Dollars, or Swiss Francs. This ensures your capital grows in the currency you will actually use to buy groceries and pay bills in retirement.
Offshore pension planning is not about complexity for its own sake. It is about ensuring your financial architecture actively supports your expatriate lifestyle. The right solution depends entirely on your residency, your timeline, and the upcoming 2027 tax legislation.
At Private Client Consultancy, our cross-border pension specialists assist UK expats in navigating these exact regulatory changes. We focus on suitability, compliance, and long-term security.
To ensure your retirement wealth is structured optimally for your future, contact us today to arrange a bespoke pension review with one of our regulated wealth managers.
UK State Pension update for EU residents
From April 2026, the rules around voluntary National Insurance contributions for people living outside the UK are changing.
If you live in the EU and expect to rely on the UK State Pension, it may be worth reviewing your position while current options remain available.
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