The family trust gained popularity as an ownership structure for property and investments to help minimise tax and estate duty and maximise entitlement to residential care subsidies.
The abolition of estate duty some years ago, reduced income tax benefits and the increased scrutiny placed on trusts within residential care subsidy applications have all lessened the importance of some of the key benefits of family trusts.
But this does not mean trusts no longer have a useful purpose.
Trusts are expensive to operate. There is the cost of establishing the trust, the cost of preparing an annual tax return for the trust if it owns income-producing assets and the annual cost of administering the trust. These costs must be compared with the benefit gained from the protection of assets from a variety of different risks as well as other ancillary benefits.
Trusts can provide protection against a number of potential risks, of which the key ones are: