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Family trusts: Are they still worth it?

Discretionary (family) trusts have long been a favoured structure for Australian families and business owners, offering flexibility and asset protection. But with rising scrutiny from the Australian Tax Office (ATO) and increasing compliance complexity, many are asking, are they still worth it?

The ATO has intensified its focus on trust distributions, beneficiary entitlements, and access to tax credits, often applying narrower legal interpretations to established practices. This growing attention is partly due to the significant economic footprint of trusts (over $60 billion distributed to 1.7 million recipients).

While discretionary trusts remain useful wealth vehicles, the administrative burden and compliance costs are undeniably increasing.

Some of the key issues arising from discretionary trusts currently are:

Family trust elections (FTEs)

To access tax benefits like franking credits or carryforward losses, a discretionary trust must elect to be a family trust (FTE), nominating a ‘test individual’ (typically a parent or grandparent). Only members of the test individual’s family group can receive income without triggering the 47% Family Trust Distribution Tax (FTDT).

We’re seeing increased ATO scrutiny around FTDT, especially during succession planning. For example, if a trust with ‘Dad’ as the test individual distributes franked dividends to a company owned by his daughter’s trust (with her as the test individual), FTDT applies - resulting in a $47,000 tax on an otherwise ‘tax-free’ $100,000 distribution.

The ATO also considers broader definitions of “distribution,” including loans, credits, and property transfers. FTEs require careful planning, particularly during intergenerational wealth transfers.

1. Corporate beneficiaries and the 45-day holding rule

The ATO is reviewing whether newly incorporated corporate beneficiaries meet the 45-day holding rule for franking credit eligibility. This rule requires shares to be held ‘at risk’ for 45 days, but if the beneficiary company is created after the dividend is paid, eligibility is questioned. Official guidance from the ATO is still pending.

2. Section 100A: reimbursement agreements

It has been a few years since the ATO issued its guidance on reimbursement agreements. These rules require the beneficiary to receive the ultimate benefit of any appointed trust entitlement. The ATO continues to audit under this provision, despite mixed outcomes in court. Its 2022 public guidance remains in effect.

The Bendel Case

The Bendel Case has received a lot of attention as the Full Federal Court disagreed with the ATO’s long-held view that unpaid entitlements with private companies fall within the definition of loan in Division 7A. The High Court has granted the ATO leave to appeal and the ATO will continue to apply the existing views while the outcome is pending, Regardless of the outcome, the ATO has signalled it may use other provisions to achieve similar tax results.

What changes are being considered?

Treasury and government policy groups are actively reviewing discretionary trusts as part of broader tax reform initiatives. Some theories of what might be included in a potential reform include:

• Imposing a flat tax rate of 24-30 per cent on trust distributions

• Treating trusts like companies for tax purposes

• Reducing the capital gain tax discount available

• Introducing a dual income tax system, where labour income is taxed progressively and passive income is taxed at a flat rate.

So, are trusts still worth it?

Despite the growing attention and complexity, discretionary trusts remain valuable where they are managed diligently and sufficient investment is made in their administration.

Although the changes remain to be seen, we expect the legal flexibility will continue to outweigh the tax complexity. This all needs to be considered and appropriate advice is required throughout each stage of a trust’s lifecycle. Trusts should not be set up just because someone said it was a good idea.

 

Peter Bardos is a tax partner at HLB Mann Judd, Sydney. This article is for general information only. It should not be accepted as authoritative advice and any person wishing to act upon the material should obtain properly considered advice which will take into account their own specific circumstances.

 

  •   22 October 2025
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29 Comments
OldbutSane
October 23, 2025

It is about time that the ATO cracked down on trusts. The current court case re unpaid distributions to a company not being treated as a loan to the trust and subject to interest is just one area. Trusts are useful and I have no problem with their use but it is too easy to avoid tax using them eg splitting personal services income, distributions to children that never get paid and the "loans" written off, distributions to companies (these should be banned IMHO).

2
Wildcat
October 23, 2025

PSI/PSB issues are real but we already have laws for that. Not sure a loan to a related party is so easy to write off. Bendel notwithstanding. Distributions to children that don’t get paid are an asset of the child. Think family law, that can get ugly really quickly. And we have s100A already.

I would expect Bendel will either get resolved or it will simply be legislated. What’s the issue with a corporate beneficiary? The money is still tax trapped.

Most of the problems are fixable just by enforcing current laws, more complexity isn’t required by and large once Bendel resolved.

A better solution would be to use franking credits as a tax offset only (as they used to be). This will hit not only trust beneficiaries but tax free pensions too. Why should commonwealth bank or BHP never pay ANY corporate tax as they are received by older people in pension phase? This is a disgrace that our own companies are not taxed in this circumstance and it’s not their fault. It’s stupid tax law.

3
Dudley
October 24, 2025


"Why should commonwealth bank or BHP never pay ANY corporate tax as they are received by older people in pension phase?":

Commonwealth Bank Corporate Income Taxes Paid: $3,513,000,000 in FY 2024:
https://www.commbank.com.au/content/dam/commbank/assets/about/opportunity-initiatives/commbank-tax-transparency-code.pdf

Most imputed to shareholders.

If that is "stupid tax law" then so is imputing withheld wage tax to the wage earners who earnt the wage.

3
Wildcat
October 24, 2025

No Dudley you are conflating two different things as being the same. Withheld income tax from wages is a part of the remuneration for an employee. The refund of franking credits to pensioners means the tax paid by the corporation is given to someone else. If we are going to talk about minimum tax on trusts we have to talk about minimum net collected tax on on company profits. You like your numbers:

CBA Profit: $100
Tax $30
Dividend $70.
Fr Cr paid to pensioner $30.

Net tax collected by the ATO = $NIL

Therefore your data reference for tax paid does not equate to tax retained by the Commonwealth of Australia (as opposed to the Bank).

There is no argument that says this makes sense if we take of our selfish hats and put on our what is good for the country hat. We end up with ridiculously complex tax proposals (eg Div 296) although it is equitable, massive tax load on PAYG (63% compared to a OECD average circa 34% of tax). And we screw all our young people.

Also when Keating bought in Fr Cr they were not refundable, it was an election grab by Howard which is now an inalienable right that should never have existed, especially tax free after 60 super.

4
Dudley
October 24, 2025


Pensioner wages: $100
Tax $0

Net tax collected by the ATO = $NIL

Pensioner claimed tax free threshold so employer knows how much tax to withhold and pay to ATO:
https://www.ato.gov.au/individuals-and-families/jobs-and-employment-types/tax-free-threshold/how-to-claim-the-tax-free-threshold

Company is not required to guess at pensioner's other income so withholds 30% of pensioner's share of profit and informs ATO how much was withheld from pensioner and paid to ATO. ATO credits the withheld tax to pensioner.

3
GeorgeB
October 24, 2025

“Withheld income tax from wages is a part of the remuneration for an employee. The refund of franking credits to pensioners means the tax paid by the corporation is given to someone else.”

Since corporate profits are remunerated to their shareholders, any tax withheld from the corporation is in effect also withheld from the same shareholders because if it was not withheld it would be part of the said remuneration. Moreover the tax withheld must be declared as income by the shareholders so it’s not really that different to the “Withheld income tax …for an employee”

3
Wildcat
October 24, 2025

GeorgeB if you are happy to screw the next generation well that says a lot. Some tax should be paid on corporate profits. What is your solution to this problem??

Nothing in the world can this make sense to me where your argument makes. You explain to all Australia, especially the young ones, that you and all the old people (including me btw) should get zero tax, claim pbs, access Medicare, claim the aged pension, benefit from ndis, fund aged care, discounts on rates, registration, electricity and gas but you deserve to keep the franking credit??? Seriously??

I’m sorry but you have such a twisted sense of self entitlement at the expense of your fellow countrymen that I just don’t know what to say to you.

1
Wildcat
October 24, 2025

Dudley aged pension isn’t wages. It’s a government handout to prevent poverty in old age and a symbol of a developed caring society.

Account based pensions are for those that are better off. Yes we should reduce concessions to >$3m (I would argue $2m on indexation and no unrealised gains) but the ones below $3m should pay a trifling amount. Fr cr would be that small concession.

1
Dudley
October 24, 2025


"Dudley aged pension isn’t wages.":

No, it is taxable income. As are an Aged Pensioner's wages, interest, rent, dividends and franking credits.

If taxable income is less than the tax-FREE threshold, no tax is payable and any tax credits are refunded.


"Fr cr would be that small concession.":

Not refunding franking credits to a taxpayer with a taxable income less than the tax-FREE threshold results in a marginal tax rate of 30% (in most cases, otherwise whatever is the value of FrankingCredits / (Dividends + FrankingCredits).

1
James#
October 25, 2025

@Wildcat.

Shareholders own small parts of a company. Distributed dividends etc under the company system are taxed at the shareholders marginal tax rate. If a shareholder gets all franking credits back it is simply because their total taxable income falls at or below the tax free threshold. For this person whether they were paid the grossed up dividend up front or claim the imputed credit back is immaterial.

You don't like the refund-ability of franking credits, fine. Then pay the full grossed up amount to the shareholder up front. It makes no difference. But it's unfair to deny a low income earner a refund on earnings attributed to them that have been taxed when they should not. The government can't have it both ways. Are you suggesting to change the entire company system? Further this country, unlike many others, taxes investment income and interest on savings at the same rates. Remember the invested money has already been taxed at marginal rates. Where is the incentive to save or invest?

As for paying more taxes, I like many would be happy to contribute more when responsible spending and pork barreling and boondoggle restraint prevails which is NF likely!

2
Wildcat
October 25, 2025

#James it was never the pensioners money. It was tax paid by the corporation. I would even be happy with a $5k cap on fr cr refunds so all the little guys don’t get fiddled in their own minds. That’s not where the main game breeds to played. I work in finance. When I see $100k’s of corporate tax dollars being refunded to individuals because I’m good at my job I’m not proud. But my duty of care first and foremost is to my client not the Commonwealth of Australia. As much as I don’t like it.

And they aren’t evil people, they are just exercising their rights under the law of the land. I personally do the same. Doesn’t mean it should be the law, nor make it right.

My only shallow justification is your final point. As Kerry Packer said “Senator, I’ve seen what you do with the money, I think it’s better off in my pocket than yours”.

And such is the abject failure of our incompetent bureaucrats and politicians. They aren’t worthy of anything, especially respect.

3
Dudley
October 25, 2025


"it was never the pensioners money. It was tax paid by the corporation.":

Tax was withheld from wages paid to a worker employed by a corporation.
It was tax paid by the corporation to ATO and imputed by ATO to the worker as a tax credit.
The worker's net wage plus tax credit, their gross wage is their income on which they might pat tax.

James#
October 26, 2025

@Wildcat

"#James it was never the pensioners money. It was tax paid by the corporation"

Err, no. It was tax paid on your behalf as a part owner of the company, attributed to you personally and the net amount paid plus the imputation credit having to be fully declared on your personal tax return. As such the gross amount forms part of an individuals taxable income. Just like PAYG, if at tax time, you have paid more tax than your taxable income requires, a refund is due. The fact that low income earners get a full refund of franking credits is merely a result of the tax free threshold. Perhaps we should remove that like New Zealand, but that would punish the poor more!?

Again to remove the problem of franking credits, companies could just pay the full gross amount to shareholders as a dividend rather than having tax withheld. I doubt the government would like or permit that though!

2
OldbutSane
October 26, 2025

I've seen loans to related parties simply written if using a journal entry. It's probably not legal but it happens.

Wildcat
October 26, 2025

Sounds like a lot of self interested ppl happy to screw their own children for all their worth. 

You are also conflating corporate tax with wages. But wages are taxed pensions are not. This is larceny on a grand scale and your self interest can’t see the deceit and damage you are doing to our country and our children.

Dudley
October 26, 2025


"conflating corporate tax with wages":
Companies withhold profit tax from shareholders.
Companies withhold wage tax from workers.

"But wages are taxed pensions are not."
Age Pension is taxable income.
Disbursement ('pension') account withdrawals have a tax rate of 0%.

"This is larceny":
Not according the Law.

"damage you are doing to our country and our children."
Saving and investing is damaging?
Children will have their time as adults.

1
Greg E
October 23, 2025

tax benefits arising from use of trusts are limited in the overall context and have so for a very long time. They are useful for legal structuring and can be helpful in asset protection. Take it from this old accountant who has set up hundreds of trusts for clients going back to the late 70's. Politicians (most notably Paul Keating in the early 80's) have been saying for many years that they were going to kill off trusts. Admittedly they did reduce their effectiveness for tax planning over the years but they are still very useful vehicles if used properly.

2
Graham W
October 25, 2025

I agree that trusts have many benefits as long as the primary aim is to save tax. I also set up a lot for clients since the seventies. Running a small business through a partnership is inflexible with no asset protection for a start. A trust is better. For my family as my wife and I are in our seventies,I closed our SMSF and now use a trust. So no auditor fees and no minimum pensions. Trusted family members will take over when we are gone. I estimate little tax effect on investment income becoming taxable due to rebates available. I think that this is reasonable family estate planning and a good reason to leave family trusts alone.

3
Graham W
October 25, 2025

MY typo, I meant that the primary reason is NOT to save tax.

Dudley
October 25, 2025


"closed our SMSF and now use a trust" ... "little tax effect on investment income becoming taxable due to rebates available":

SMSF Disbursement ('pension') Account tax rate 0%.

SAPTO tax FREE threshold for couple is 2 * $31,887 = $63,774 with >=30% marginal tax rate at larger taxable incomes.
Capitalised:
= 63774 / 5%
= $1,275,480

Trust is not suitable for tax minimisation for homeowning SAPTO Couple with more than ~$1.3M ?

Age Pension Part Pension homeowner couple threshold is $1,074,000.

More suitable where distributions are to more individuals with marginal tax rate = 0% than only to the primary couple?

Distributions from trust to company when 25% marginal tax rate (excluding franking credits) is less than primary couple marginal tax rate?

Google:
Q:
'What are the benefits of a trust compared to a SMSF?'
A:
'While Self-Managed Superannuation Funds (SMSFs) offer tax advantages for retirement savings, a trust provides greater flexibility in asset management, access to funds, and estate planning. A trust, such as a discretionary family trust, can hold a wider range of assets and distribute income among family members to minimise tax, but it does not have the same low tax rates as an SMSF.'
more ...

32
Owen Perks
October 23, 2025

1.7million Trust beneficiaries according to the author. I had an idea there are around 1 million Trusts in Australia (but can't find a reference), implying significantly more than 1.7 million beneficiaries. Either way, that's a lot more voters than the 80,000 Superannuation beneficiaries that were set to be affected by abandoned Chalmers plan to tax unrealised capital gains. Methinks that major changes to taxation of Trust income would be a significant vote loser.

1
Steve
October 24, 2025

The idea of taxing non-fixed trusts like companies is not new. It was part of the Review into Business Taxation by Jon Ralph in 1999. Never got legislated because of complexity around implementation. Cannot see how Treasury would go down that path again especially given the fact that Chalmers is still wiping the egg of his face in respect of Div 296 changes.

2
Rob
October 26, 2025

Highly efficient in the situation where you have a Super Account in tax free retirement mode + a Trust to hold "additional" investments

1
Dudley
October 26, 2025


"Highly efficient in the situation where you have a Super Account in tax free retirement mode + a Trust to hold "additional" investments":

An investment company with each shareholder with a different class of share allows tax efficient distribution, plus profit can be retained and associated franking credits accumulated for additional tax efficiency.

1
sanjiv
October 27, 2025

What happens to a family trust when the test individual and say his wife pass away. Do the children retain access to benefits of the Family Trust?

Mark B
October 28, 2025

A correctly structured Family Trust does not rely on the "test individual" or his wife and can distribute to other family members as dictated by the Trustee of the Trust. Often that is a company with directors (and shareholders) initially the "test individual" and wife but as aging occurs the children are invited to takeover (become directors and inherit the shares) and thus allowing the structure to work well for the transition of assets in the estate.
The controller of the income distribution ie the Trustee is key.

sanjiv
October 28, 2025

Thanks Mark B
However can this entity get benefit of the discounted capital gains tax as individuals can?

Mark B
October 29, 2025

Yes they certainly can.

 

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