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Updated on 6 April 2026

Remittances to the UK

If the remittance basis of taxation applies to you for a tax year prior to 2025/26, you need to understand what a remittance is.

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Overview

  The remittance basis no longer applies from 6 April 2025. However, if you have foreign income and gains for a tax year prior to 2025/26 to which the remittance basis of taxation applied, these would still be taxable in the UK if remitted on or after 6 April 2025. A low rate of tax will be available if those remitted amounts are designated under the temporary repatriation facility. From tax year 2025/26, certain people may be able to claim UK tax relief for foreign income and gains arising on or after 6 April 2025 under the foreign income and gains regime

In broad terms, there is a remittance if you have foreign income or proceeds from foreign gains and you bring them directly or indirectly to the UK such that you (or a ‘relevant person’ – see below) can enjoy the benefit of the income or gains in the UK.

If possible, it is best to avoid making remittances of income or gains because you may inadvertently create a UK tax liability by doing so. It can be difficult to avoid making remittances without a full understanding of the law and professional advice.

Example – cash remittance of foreign income

Robert has come to the UK on 1 May 2024 from Romania to work in a bank in London. His only UK income is from the bank that employs him. He also has a bank account in Romania. This account contains only the profits from his rental property in Romania.

On 1 February 2025, Robert uses his Romanian debit card to draw out £50 from his Romanian bank account from a cash machine in London. Robert has made a remittance of £50 of his Romanian rental income.

Types of remittance

Services

There is a remittance if you receive a service in the UK and pay for the service using income or proceeds from gains that arose outside of the UK.

Example – remittance of foreign gain through UK service

Anthony uses a builder to build an extension to his UK property. He pays for it using money in his Spanish bank account that is there from the sale of a Spanish investment property (which happened while he was UK resident), making a direct transfer from the Spanish account to the builder’s account. Although Anthony has not remitted any money directly to his own account, a service has been provided in the UK for a relevant person (that is, himself) using proceeds from a foreign gain. A remittance of a foreign gain has therefore taken place.

Assets

If you buy an asset in the UK and pay for it using foreign income or gains, that is a remittance. If you purchase an asset overseas using foreign income or gains, and you then bring that asset to the UK (for example, a car or luxury goods), this is normally a remittance (although there are some exceptions, which are detailed below).

Debts

If you create a UK debt (that is, a debt in respect of something which is used or enjoyed in the UK) and then pay that off using foreign income, that is a remittance. The most common example is using a credit card for expenditure which is used or enjoyed in the UK.

Gifts / transfers

If you give money to someone else who then uses that money to buy goods and services in the UK for you or a relevant person, that is also a remittance.

Relevant person

A ‘relevant person’ includes you, a husband or wife, civil partner, cohabitee and children or grandchildren aged under 18. A relevant person can also be a trustee or a company. 

Exemptions

Some items that have been bought with foreign income or gains may be brought into the UK without incurring a tax charge, including:

  • items of clothing, footwear, jewellery or watches that are brought to the UK for personal use (although if you sell the items once they are in the UK they no longer qualify as exempt and will be considered to be remittances)
  • property with a value of less than £1,000
  • property which is only in the UK for less than 275 days in total

You can find detailed information on the exemptions in HMRC’s guidance.

Mixed funds

It may not always be easy to tell what income or gains you have remitted, especially if you put more than one type of income or gain into an account. An account which contains more than one type of income or gain, including one which contains income from more than one tax year, is called a ‘mixed fund’.

For example, if Robert from Romania (in the example above) paid his UK earnings into the same bank account as his Romanian rental income, and then remitted money from this account to the UK, Robert would have to follow complex rules to help him establish whether the remitted money was the Romanian rental income or the UK money.

If you make a remittance to the UK from a bank account that contains income or gains from more than one source, then some ordering rules are involved. This may be disadvantageous to you as you may be deemed to have remitted money which incurs an unnecessary tax charge rather than money which could be freely remitted.

Continuing the example of Robert above, if he had profits from his Romanian property which arose before he became UK tax resident, those amounts should be held in a separate account and not mixed with profits arising during his UK resident period.  The amounts relating to his UK non-resident period could be brought into the UK without creating any UK tax charge – this would not be a remittance for UK tax purposes, as the profits are not in the scope of UK tax.   

If you were a remittance basis user for a tax year prior to 2025/26, if possible, it is best to avoid making any remittances of income or gains at all. This is because it can be difficult to avoid making remittances ‘safely’ without a full understanding of the law and professional advice.

If you do need to make remittances, you should keep different sources of money quite separate so that it is easy to identify what exactly has been brought into the UK. For example, in the case of Robert, he should establish separate accounts for his Romanian rental income arising after he became resident and his UK employment income – if he wants to bring money to the UK, he can use his UK employment income as this has already been taxed in the UK and will not suffer any further tax as a result of bringing it in (but he should be careful that any interest earned on the account that holds his UK employment income is paid into a separate account to prevent this becoming a ‘mixed’ account).

If you are entitled to overseas workday relief for tax years prior to 2025/26 and you had a bank account into which you only paid your employment income, this account could potentially be a ‘qualifying account’ or a ‘special mixed fund’. The advantage of such an account is that your remittances are easier to identify because they are all deemed to occur at the end of the year. This means that you do not need to identify the composition of the account, which will contain income for both UK and non-UK work duties, each time you make a remittance. You can find more details in HMRC’s manual.

We would recommend that you should seek help from HMRC and/or a professional tax adviser about remittances if you used the remittance basis of taxation and intend to make any remittances to the UK. 

More information

There is more information about remittances in part 9 of HM Revenue & Customs’ (HMRC) guidance RDR1, which you can find on GOV.UK.

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