Estate Planning for Miami Families With Heirs Abroad: Non-Citizen Spouses, Consular Inheritance, and Immigration Status

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Miami is a city of arrivals. Families here often have one foot in Florida and one foot somewhere else — a spouse who is a green-card holder rather than a citizen, children who were born abroad, parents still living in another country, and heirs who may never set foot in a Florida courtroom. When you build an estate plan in this environment, you are not just deciding who inherits. You are working at the intersection of Florida probate law, federal estate-tax rules, and immigration status — three systems that do not always talk to each other. This article explains where those areas collide and why newcomers to South Florida usually need both an estate-planning attorney and a separate immigration attorney.

The non-citizen spouse problem: why QDOT trusts exist

Most married couples assume the surviving spouse inherits everything tax-free. For U.S. citizens, that is largely true because of the unlimited marital deduction. But that deduction generally does not apply when the surviving spouse is not a U.S. citizen — even a lawful permanent resident. Congress was concerned that a non-citizen spouse could inherit a large estate and then leave the country beyond the reach of the IRS.

The standard solution is a Qualified Domestic Trust, or QDOT. Property passing to a non-citizen spouse through a properly drafted QDOT can defer estate tax until distributions are made from the trust, rather than triggering it at the first death. A QDOT has strict requirements — including a U.S. trustee and, for larger trusts, a U.S. bank as trustee — so this is not a do-it-yourself document. If your spouse is on a path to naturalization, the analysis can change once citizenship is obtained, which is one reason your estate plan and your immigration timeline should be coordinated rather than handled in isolation.

Estate-tax exposure for non-resident, non-citizen owners

The rules tighten further for non-resident aliens who own U.S. assets. A foreign parent who owns a Miami condo or shares in a U.S. company can face federal estate tax on those U.S.-situated assets, and the exemption available to non-resident aliens is dramatically smaller than the one available to citizens and residents. We do not quote a fixed number here because these thresholds change, but the gap is large enough that foreign owners of Florida real estate should plan deliberately — often through entity structuring — before a death forces the issue.

Florida homestead, wills, and trusts in a cross-border family

Florida law adds its own wrinkles. The homestead protections in the Florida Constitution restrict how you can devise your primary residence if you are survived by a spouse or minor child, regardless of immigration status. A will must still meet the execution formalities of Florida Statutes §732.502 — signed at the end, witnessed by two competent witnesses present together — even if the testator signed it while abroad. A revocable living trust under Chapter 736 of the Florida Statutes is frequently the better tool for immigrant families, because it can avoid probate entirely and spare out-of-country heirs the cost and delay of appearing in, or hiring counsel for, a Florida probate proceeding.

Out-of-country heirs and consular realities

When beneficiaries live abroad, practical problems multiply. Heirs may need to sign documents before a U.S. consular officer or a foreign notary, obtain an apostille, and provide certified translations. A foreign heir who wants to administer the estate may need to travel to the U.S. or appoint a Florida personal representative. Distributions to certain countries can be slowed by banking and sanctions compliance. None of this is insurmountable, but it should be anticipated in the plan — not discovered during grief.

Guardianship and powers of attorney for traveling clients

Immigrant parents should name a guardian for minor children and should think hard about that choice when the most natural guardian lives in another country. We also recommend a durable power of attorney and a health-care surrogate for any client who travels abroad for visa interviews, consular processing, or to care for family — so that financial and medical decisions can be made in Florida while you are out of the country. If you are abroad when a green-card or naturalization deadline lands, you do not want your U.S. affairs frozen.

Why you need both kinds of counsel

Our firm handles estate planning; we do not practice immigration law, and the two should be sequenced together. If your plan depends on a spouse naturalizing, on a beneficiary’s status, or on a pending petition, we coordinate with a dedicated immigration attorney. For families building their status alongside their estate — for example through employment-based immigration — we routinely refer clients to Fitenko Law, whose USCIS case strategy can keep an immigration timeline aligned with the documents we draft. Getting both pieces right is how a Miami family protects what it has built on both sides of the border.

This article is general information, not legal advice. Speak with a licensed Florida estate-planning attorney about your specific situation.

For more on our Florida practice, see our overview of probate in Palm Beach. Morgan Legal Group's affiliated New York office also handles New York elder law.

DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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