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Kurious(Newbie)Newbie
1 Nov 2023

Hi,


I wish to understand if I have interpreted information on the ATO website correctly.


For context - I have an inheritance coming from the USA. There is no inheritance tax in that jurisdiction, and I have confirmed I will not have any tax liabilities in the USA for any of it. The estate will pay any taxes before distribution of the monies to myself.


The inheritance includes monies from three retirement accounts (USA equivalent of an Australian superannuation accounts), an annuity benefit, 5 life insurance policies benefits, and a house & contents. The house was the deceased primary residence, was bought before 1975, and does not earn income. It will be sold before the 2 year deadline to be CGT exempt.  


I am an Australian citizen and do not hold dual citizenship.


My understanding from info on your website is:

  • Lump sum death benefit from an overseas superannuation account is not taxed.
  • If the house is sold within 2 years of the date of death of the deceased, it will be CGT exempt.
  • Benefit one time pay-outs from the life insurance policies and the annuity death benefit are considered inherited monies and thus not taxed.


Is my interpretation correct?

Thank you!



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2,272 views
11 replies

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CaroATO(Community Support)Community Support
2 Nov 2023

Hi @Kurious,


My understanding is you'll receive money after the assets are sold, am I right?


If I'm on the right track, it's simply money going into your bank account with no tax obligations.


By the looks of it you've done some great research. If you haven't already check out our article that talks about tax on gifts and inheritances.

Kurious(Newbie)Newbie
2 Nov 2023

Hi Caro,


Yes, that is correct. I will only be receiving monies from US bank accounts into my account here.


I just wanted to check that it coming from overseas make no tax obligation difference.




nadrim(Newbie)Newbie
16 Apr 2024

Hi Caro, I wanted to follow up on your advice above. I am likely to inherit a lump sum from a UK superannuation fund following the death of my dad (I confirmed that it is recognised by HMRC as a qualifying UK pension and meets the Australian definition of a foreign superannuation fund so the rules of 99B and foreign trusts do not apply). I am a lay person but from articles I read normally lump sums from a foreign super are taxable under 305-70 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (where these lumps sums are not inherited, for example if I took a lump sum from my own UK super fund). Where you take a lump sum from your own foreign super, the amount received is taxable (when a person has been Australian tax resident for more than 6 months) on any increase in value of the foreign super fund at the date of the lump sum transfer and the value of the fund the day before they became Australian resident (taxable on the applicable fund earnings).


But this legislation, in my view, was designed to deal with receiving a lump sum from your own overseas super rather than an inherited overseas super. In the case of my dad, he had never been Australian resident and has always been UK resident. So its impossible/difficult to apply the rules in section 305-70. Potentially it could be argued that either the applicable fund earnings are nil or that I have to put myself in "dad's place" and consider the value of the increase of his fund (as if it were always my fund) from the day I became Australian resident to the day I received the lump sum and tax that. This would give a different tax outcome to saying an inherited overseas tax super is tax free.


Is the correct Australian tax analysis to refer to https://community.ato.gov.au/s/article/a079s0000009GnFAAU/tax-on-gifts-and-inheritances and that the money I receive from my dad's super is cash as you described above? It has been mentioned a number of times in the ATO communities that a lump sum from a qualifying inherited super is non taxable and is merely the receipt of non taxable cash. So I hope that this is the correct analysis and that section 305-70 would not apply? It would certainly make a lot more sense to follow your analysis above and from other ATO community responders on this matter.

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Overseas Inheritance - deceased primary residence & superannuation accounts | ATO Community