Did you have to ask for that specifically? My sons, born in the UK, passports say Nationality USA. We did it at the Embassy in London.
nope nothing special. Never noticed at first
Did you have to ask for that specifically? My sons, born in the UK, passports say Nationality USA. We did it at the Embassy in London.
It doesn't affect them until they start earning a real salary. They can also denounce American citizenship at any time. I don't know the consequences of the latter, perhaps getting us citizenship and then denouncing it will block you from ever getting it again.
There are also double taxation rules that limits liability.
There are exclusions on anything under about £70k and there is also a treaty so you don't get taxed twice. Just fill out a form at the U.S. Embassy, tick all the right box s, get the credits you're entitled to and job done. It's a PITA, but not really a big deal.
Denouncing US citizenship doesn't block you, it's another pita though to become a naturalised US citizen again.
If you get them American citizenship and move back to the UK, they will still have to pay US tax. The IRS levels taxes on American citizens no matter where they are in the world.
Not an immediate problem, but they will have to fill in tax returns once they reach a certain age, an admin ball ache apparently.

Apparently it's also a massive pain if you want to register a bank account outside the US as well. Many banks won't touch you because of the paperwork involved since the U.S. changed procedures recently.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24135021
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24338387
I think from that unless you really need to be a US citizen (I.e. live in the US) then try and avoid it!![]()

If you get them American citizenship and move back to the UK, they will still have to pay US tax. The IRS levels taxes on American citizens no matter where they are in the world.
Not an immediate problem, but they will have to fill in tax returns once they reach a certain age, an admin ball ache apparently.
Apparently it's also a massive pain if you want to register a bank account outside the US as well. Many banks won't touch you because of the paperwork involved since the U.S. changed procedures recently.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24135021
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24338387
I think from that unless you really need to be a US citizen (I.e. live in the US) then try and avoid it!![]()
Seems becoming a UK citizen is easy, getting rid of being an American is the hard bit.
is this still the case? I heard somewhere that they changes to a residence based taxation system (like the rest of the free world)
Wife and i are both British. Born and bred.. It's just that we decided to jump ship and go live on the other side of the pond over 10yrs ago. So anyway, since then, we've had two kids..
My child will be born in Canada, to British parents (both of us). He/she can apply for a British passport after 18 years - that's as much research as I've done; as far as I'm aware he/she will be granted this, due to both the parents being British. I assume the same from the US.
They won't have to apply for citizenship just passports.How can you write pro's with an apostrophe, and then write cons? It just doesn't make any sense :S
Dual citizenship for those kids is a great plan. Hopefully they don't have to answer all the stupid questions adults do.