US-ISRAEL INHERITANCE

A map, not a manual

Inheriting across the US-Israel border

A plain-English map of what you are facing, in what order, on what clock, and who to call.

When someone with ties to both countries dies, the people who inherit meet two legal systems, two tax systems, and banks that freeze everything. No single professional owns the whole problem. This site maps the landscape so you can walk into the right conversations already knowing the shape of what is ahead.

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Why this is genuinely hard

Three areas, two countries, one missing treaty

A cross-border estate has to clear three areas in both countries at once: the legal process, the tax exposure, and the banks. The two countries do not coordinate the way you might expect.

Sitting over all of it is one structural fact: there is no estate tax treaty between the United States and Israel. The only treaty in force between them covers income tax, signed in 1975. That gap is why coordination across the two systems falls to you and the professionals you choose, and why getting the sequence right matters.

See the side-by-side comparison of the two systems →

Locate yourself

Six questions decide which rules apply

Every professional you speak to will ask some version of these first, because the answers decide which rules apply. Answering them now will tell you roughly where you sit and make your first meetings far shorter.

  1. What was the deceased's status? US citizen, US green-card holder, Israeli resident, dual, or other.
  2. Where was the deceased domiciled? Domicile, the place they treated as their permanent home, is the single biggest driver of US estate tax, and it is not the same as where they died.
  3. Who inherits, and what is each heir's status? Is any heir a US person? Is any heir an Israeli resident? This decides who has reporting duties.
  4. Where do the assets sit? This is called situs. A US bank account, US real estate, or US company shares are US-situs; an Israeli apartment or Israeli account is Israeli-situs.
  5. What types of assets are there? Cash, real estate, retirement accounts, business interests, securities. Each is treated differently.
  6. Is there a will, and what is the estate roughly worth? A will, no will, or a foreign will each route differently, and rough value decides which thresholds you cross.

The clock

A slow Israeli process runs alongside a fast US deadline

A cross-border estate commonly takes twelve to eighteen months or more to settle, because each court order, translation, and clearance depends on the one before it. The danger is that the slowest, most paperwork-heavy track in Israel runs alongside a hard, early deadline in the United States.

The deadline buried early

If a US estate tax return is required, it is generally due nine months after the date of death. A six-month extension of time to file can be requested, but it does not extend the time to pay. This clock starts on the day of death, long before the Israeli side is usually untangled.

Whether a return is required in your case is a question for a licensed professional, and worth asking early rather than late.