“How do I move my financial life to another country?” It’s a question we hear from many clients as they begin making a cross-border transition. Whether you are making the move to the U.S. or Canada, you want to transition your finances smoothly and seamlessly while saving time, headaches, and every dollar you possibly can.

Much like financial planning, transition planning is a process and not a transaction or an end in itself. And like financial planning, the most effective transition planning hinges on a clear understanding of what you want to achieve in terms of lifestyle both now and in the future.

One of our key roles as cross-border financial planners is to learn where you are trying to go (aka, your goals and objectives) and then design a detailed plan to test the viability of your goals/objectives and ultimately get you to your destination. After all, without a flight plan, how can you know which direction to go?

Our firm’s Canada-U.S. transition planning focuses on 9 key areas that should be considered when making a move across the border:

Customs Planning: This element addresses the process of relocating your assets to Canada or the U.S. Transporting belongings such as cars, pets, guns or other valuables across the border brings up specific issues that need to be sorted out ahead of any move. Immigration Planning: Whether it’s temporary or permanent, moving to and living and working in Canada/U.S. has legal ramifications. Immigration planning covers all the legal means of crossing the border. Cash Management Planning: This area includes the development and analysis of your net worth statement and an assessment of your cash inflow/outflow during your move. Our team can look at the ownership of your assets (whether between spouses or between the U.S. and Canada) and calculate a variety of financial ratios to see what challenges or opportunities arise. Your net worth statement is a benchmark from which we can analyze the impact of your move over time. We can also focus on the cross-border transition of cash and offer strategies to simplify your financial life before your move. This includes developing a prudent, purposeful and ongoing approach to currency conversion and foreign exchange. Income Tax Planning: When making a cross-border move, a comprehensive review of your current and prospective tax situation is crucial as it can reveal strategies to reduce your tax liability before and after your move. Effective tax planning reviews various techniques that may apply to your situation—including tax planning strategies that are state and province specific—all with the aim of curbing your tax liability. Independence Planning: Will you have enough money to sustain your retirement lifestyle through the decades? Independence planning uses current assets, income, and expenses to create detailed projections that help determine the long-term achievability of your financial and lifestyle objectives. Such analysis can provide valuable insights into which actions, if any, may be needed to attain your goals. Education Planning: This element looks toward the future to determine: how much is required, at what point in time, and what you need to do to fulfill future education goals. This planning can also include a review of your cross-border education savings options and what to do before a move. Risk Management: Catastrophic events such as fire, theft, illness, disability or death could devastate what has taken a lifetime to build. Risk management looks at your current exposure for risk and determines the most prudent course of action to address such risk. There are numerous differences in the way risk is managed in the U.S. and Canada. When making a cross-border move, it is vital to ensure you will be fully covered. Estate Planning: Estate planning assists in establishing order to your affairs so that you can: 1. continue to control your property while alive, 2. provide for the needs of loved ones should you become disabled, and 3. leave what you have to whomever you want, in the way that you want, and at the lowest overall cost. Investment Planning: This area focuses the investment objectives you established in your financial plan and then develops an investment portfolio to achieve your desired rate of return while also managing for tax liability. An essential part of the transition planning process is developing a properly structured and integrated investment strategy that includes your investment accounts on both sides of the border.

Are you ready to begin the transition planning process? Whatever your goals and needs are, the experts at Cardinal Point Wealth Management can help ensure a smooth road to your cross-border destination.

Terry Ritchie is the Director of Cross-Border Wealth Services at the Cardinal Point, a cross-border wealth management organization with offices in the United States and Canada. Terry has been providing Canada-U.S. cross-border financial, investment, tax, transition, and estate planning services to affluent families for over 25 years. He is active as an author, speaker and educator on international tax and financial planning matters. www.cardinalpointwealth.com