Gibraltar's tax position is the headline pitch: no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, and no VAT, backed by a residency process the site walks UK nationals through step by step. Moving to Gibraltar from UK is run by Fiduciary Wealth Management, a firm with offices in both Gibraltar and London, and the whole resource is built around one fairly narrow but expensive question for a British retiree or executive: how do you legally pick up residency on the Rock and restructure your money once you get there. That focus is what gives the site its weight. It is not trying to sell holidays or property dreams. It is selling the paperwork, the pension mechanics, and the cross-border financial plumbing that sits underneath an actual move, and that honesty about scope makes Moving to Gibraltar from UK easier to take seriously than a glossier site would be. The proposition assumes a reader who has already decided Gibraltar is the destination and now needs to understand the mechanics, which is sharper than a site still trying to talk someone into the idea.
Start with what Moving to Gibraltar from UK names as its core work. There is residency application guidance, including help obtaining the residency certificate itself, which is the document that anchors everything else. Around that sits tax planning leaning on Gibraltar's regime, UK pension optimisation and cross-border pension restructuring, broader wealth management, estate planning aimed specifically at UK expats, and a cluster of practical add-ons: insurance, mortgage advice, property guidance, and currency exchange. That last group is where most relocation advisers go quiet. Telling someone that Gibraltar has no inheritance tax is easy. Helping the same person move a sterling pension, buy a flat, insure it, and convert income without bleeding money on exchange spreads is the harder, more useful part, and Moving to Gibraltar from UK at least claims to cover the full chain from first enquiry through to settled finances.
The editorial side of Moving to Gibraltar from UK is more substantial than the usual lead-generation blog. The site publishes cost-of-living breakdowns for Gibraltar, a 25-point relocation checklist, and comparisons of the different residency pathways. Content like that is genuinely consultable on its own. A reader who never picks up the phone can still come away understanding roughly what the categories of residency are, what living there costs month to month, and which boxes need ticking before a move. Whether the editorial is kept current is the open question with any advisory blog. The 25-point checklist in particular is the sort of thing a person planning the move would actually print and tick off.
Credentials are where the firm tries hardest to separate itself, and the list is specific enough to check. Fiduciary Wealth Management describes itself as independent and conflict-free, which in financial advice is a meaningful claim when it holds, because it implies the advice is not steering clients toward in-house products that quietly pay a commission. It states an affiliation with ISOLAS, a Gibraltar law firm, and membership of two professional networks, Integra International and Investor Migration Insider. It also points to being named Best International Wealth Management Practice of the Year by MGI Worldwide in 2023. Those are concrete, named affiliations and a dated award attached to a recognisable body, where a relocation site usually offers nothing checkable at all. An award and a network membership describe standing within an industry; they do not by themselves prove the outcome any individual client gets. The ISOLAS connection is the most practically interesting of the three, since residency and estate work in Gibraltar touches local law at some point, and a standing relationship with a Gibraltar law firm is exactly the kind of link that smooths that. Moving to Gibraltar from UK presents these credentials plainly, without inflating them, and that restraint reads well.
Contact details are handled visibly and without evasion. The landing page carries two phone numbers, a London line on a +44 number and a Gibraltar line on a +350 number, alongside an email at the firm's own domain. Having a real number in each jurisdiction fits the cross-border story the firm tells and makes it easy to reach the office closest to wherever the client currently sits. For a service where someone may be handing over pension and estate details, reaching a named, physically located firm with premises in two places does more to settle nerves than any reassurance on the page. Moving to Gibraltar from UK presents itself plainly: the people behind it are findable rather than hidden behind a single anonymous web form, which is the right instinct for a firm dealing in life savings.
The one gap in the evidence
On outside opinion, the picture for Moving to Gibraltar from UK is less clear than the credentials suggest it should be. The site references a Trustpilot rating of 4.9 out of 5 and runs a page collecting those Trustpilot reviews. A 4.9 is a strong score if the volume behind it is genuine. The snag is that the rating appears through the firm's own site, and the underlying review count could not be confirmed from an independent third-party source. No separate Google, Yelp, or BBB presence turned up either. That does not mean the figure is wrong; firms that handle a small number of high-value clients often accumulate modest review volumes scattered across few platforms. It does mean a prospective client of Moving to Gibraltar from UK should click straight through to Trustpilot, read the reviews in full, and form a view from the source instead of taking the headline number on trust. The score is reassuring; the absence of corroboration elsewhere keeps it from being conclusive. It is the one weak point in an otherwise well-evidenced presentation.
The audience Moving to Gibraltar from UK aims at is clearly defined. UK nationals with assets to protect: retirees moving their pensions, executives relocating for work or lifestyle, high-net-worth individuals for whom the tax mechanics are the whole reason to consider Gibraltar in the first place. The site does not pretend to serve everyone, and that narrowing is sensible. A relocation that hinges on inheritance tax and capital gains planning is not a budget exercise. The firm's positioning, in two financial centres with legal and network affiliations behind it, is pitched at people who already know they need specialist advice and not a checklist alone, even if the checklist is a generous free starting point.
Where the proposition deserves pressure is the gap between its polish and the independence of its proof. Moving to Gibraltar from UK makes a strong independence claim, holds named affiliations, and won an industry award. All of that reads credibly. Yet the one piece a cautious client most wants, a clear body of verifiable reviews from people who actually went through the process, sits behind the firm's own framing of its Trustpilot score with no corroborating footprint anywhere else. For a service asking someone to trust it with pensions, estates, and a permanent change of country, that gap is worth noting. The published evidence is solid enough to take seriously. Whether the experience holds once a client is signed and the money has moved is something the Moving to Gibraltar from UK review record cannot yet answer.






Business address
Moving to Gibraltar from UK
3 Bell Lane ,
Gibraltar,
Gibraltar
GX11 1AA
Gibraltar
Contact details
Phone: +44 207 998 0570