USA-South Korea Cross Border Inheritance Tax USA-South Korea Cross Border Inheritance Tax

USA-South Korea Cross Border Inheritance Tax Guide

United States × South Korea: Cross-Border Inheritance & Gift Tax — No Treaty, US §2014 Credit & Korean IHT

Last updated: 3 Oct 2025

United States × South Korea: Inheritance & Gift Tax — No Treaty

The United States and South Korea have no bilateral estate/gift tax treaty. Double-tax mitigation relies on the US foreign death tax credit (IRC §2014, certified on Form 706-CE) and Korea’s national Inheritance & Gift Tax Act. Korea levies progressive IHT up to 50% (effectively 60% for certain controlling shareholdings); the statutory basic deduction is KRW 200 million. For nonresident non-citizens (NRNCs), the US taxes only US-situs assets and requires Form 706-NA if US-situs value exceeds $60,000.

IRS confirms the **treaty list** (Korea not included); US allows a **foreign death tax credit** under §2014 (with **Form 706-CE**). NRNC estates file **706-NA** if US-situs assets exceed **$60,000**. Korean law provides a **KRW 200m basic deduction** and high rates; reforms to a **recipient-based system** have been proposed for **2028** (pending legislation). :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

At a glance

No US–KR estate/gift treaty

  • US provides a unilateral foreign death tax credit (IRC §2014) for foreign taxes on foreign-situate property in the US gross estate.
  • Korea taxes per national law (no treaty override).

Why it matters

  • KR has **high rates** (to **50–60%** on some controlling shareholdings).
  • Correct situs classification + documentation (certified assessments, proof of payment) are essential to claim credits.

What taxes can bite?

CountryTax & triggerScope highlights
United States Federal estate tax (Form 706 for citizens/domiciliaries; 706-NA for NRNCs) Citizens/domiciliaries: worldwide estate. NRNCs: **US-situs** assets; filing threshold **$60,000** of US-situs property. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
South Korea Inheritance & Gift Tax (national) Progressive up to **50%** (effectively **60%** for certain controlling stakes); **KRW 200m** basic deduction. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

Relief in practice (no treaty)

  • US side — IRC §2014 credit: Estates of US citizens or residents may claim a **credit for foreign death taxes** paid to a foreign country on property situated in that country and included in the US gross estate (file **Form 706-CE** for certification). Limits apply **per country and overall**. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
  • US NRNC estates: For nonresident non-citizens, the US taxes only **US-situs** assets; the §2014 credit generally concerns US citizens/residents. Confirm applicability before claiming. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
  • Korea side: No treaty with the US; relief depends on KR domestic rules. Solid **situs evidence**, **valuations**, **assessments**, and **payment proofs** are critical to support any credit claim on the US side and to reconcile bases. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

Paper trail: date-of-death valuations (per asset), situs proofs (e.g., share register, bank domicile), certified KR assessment & receipt, translations, FX documentation.

US rules: citizens/domiciliaries vs. NRNCs

TopicUS citizens / domiciliariesNRNCs (nonresident non-citizens)
Estate tax scope Worldwide assets (Form 706). Foreign death tax **credit** possible under §2014 (with 706-CE). :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6} Only **US-situs** assets; **file 706-NA** if US-situs value **> $60,000**. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
Gift tax scope Worldwide gifts (Form 709; annual exclusions/UC credits apply). :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8} Gift tax generally on **US-situs real/tangible** property; **intangibles excluded** (e.g., stock of US corps) per **IRC §2501(a)(2)**. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}

Korea: rates & deductions (quick facts)

ItemRuleSource
Top rate 50% (effectively up to 60% for certain controlling shareholdings) WSJ/Reuters coverage of KR practice. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
Basic inheritance deduction KRW 200,000,000 (resident or non-resident decedent) Statute (EN). :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
System reform Proposed shift to recipient-based model (target 2028, pending) Reuters. :contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}

Situs drivers (high level)

AssetTypical situsNotes
Immovable propertyWhere locatedPrimary taxing right generally at situs.
Tangible movablesPhysical location at death/transferDocument location at the key date.
Bank claims / depositsDebtor location (bank)Statements & bank domicile evidence.
Shares / stockPlace of incorporationUS corp → US-situs; KR 주식회사 → KR-situs (for estate tax context).

Worked example (illustrative)

Scenario
  • Decedent: US citizen (domiciled in California).
  • Heir: Adult child resident in Seoul.
  • Assets:
    • KR-situs listed shares: KRW 2.0 billion
    • US brokerage (US-situs securities): $1.2 million
  • Assumptions (illustrative only): Ignore debts/reliefs other than KR basic deduction; FX rounded; no state death duties.
Step A — US federal estate tax
US taxes the worldwide estate. Compute Form 706. The KR-situs shares are included in the US gross estate.

Step B — Korea (IHT)
Korea taxes the KR-situs shares (apply KRW 200m basic deduction; progressive rates; controlling-stake rules if applicable).

Step C — §2014 foreign death tax credit (US)
Claim a US **credit** for KR IHT paid on the same KR-situs shares (per-country & overall caps). File **Form 706-CE** to certify the foreign tax. Net result: US liability on KR shares reduced (subject to limits). US liability on US-situs brokerage remains (no foreign tax there).

Simplified illustration. Actual outcomes depend on valuations, shareholding status, deductions, FX, and timely filings (US 706 + 706-CE; KR return).

FAQ

Is there a US–Korea inheritance/estate tax treaty?

No. The IRS treaty list for estate/gift tax does not include Korea. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}

Can a US estate claim credit for Korean inheritance tax?

Yes, for estates of US citizens or residents under IRC §2014 on foreign-situate property included in the US gross estate; certification via Form 706-CE. Limits apply. :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}

What about NRNC decedents?

NRNC estates are taxed by the US only on **US-situs** assets; a return (**Form 706-NA**) is generally required if US-situs value exceeds **$60,000**. :contentReference[oaicite:15]{index=15}

Do NRNCs owe US gift tax on US stocks?

Generally **no** — **intangibles** (e.g., stock of US corporations) are excluded for NRNC donors under **IRC §2501(a)(2)**. Gifts of **US real/tangible** property are taxable. :contentReference[oaicite:16]{index=16}


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We model US × KR exposures, compute §2014 credits, and coordinate synchronized filings (US 706/706-NA/706-CE; KR returns).