The ATO has warned that it is looking closely at how trusts distribute income and to who.
The way in which trusts distribute income has come under intense scrutiny in recent years. Trust distribution arrangements need to be carefully considered by trustees before taking steps to appoint or distribute income to beneficiaries.
An area of concern is that trustees are not considering the trust deed before income is appointed. The answer to what the trust can do, and who it can allocate income to and how, is normally in the trust deed. This should be your first point of call.
Review your deed
Family trust and interposed entity elections
A family trust election helps wrap the workings of the trust around a specific individual’s family group. These elections can help protect trust losses, company losses, and franking credits but can also cause significant tax problems if they are used incorrectly.
An interposed entity election makes an entity a member of the family group of an individual.
Where these elections are in place, it is essential that trustees understand the implications before making any decisions on distributions. Distributions of trust income outside the specified individual’s family group will trigger family trust distribution tax at penalty rates.
The ATO is also on the lookout for arrangements where amounts are allocated or appointed to beneficiaries, but they don’t receive the real financial benefit of the distribution. If the arrangement has the effect of reducing the overall tax paid on the income of the trust, then this will normally increase the level of risk involved and attract the ATO’s attention.
Changes have been made to capture more information on the tax return about how trusts distribute income. These include:
Trusts can be an excellent vehicle for many reasons including the flexibility to determine how income is distributed. The cost of that flexibility is strong controls and compliance.
WLM can help
The ATO is increasingly strident about how trusts are distributing income, and the tax impact of those distributions. It’s important for trustees to get it right because if trust distributions are found to be invalid, the tax ramifications can be significant.
Please contact us if you would like to review your trust set up and avoid scrutiny from the ATO.
This is general advice only and does not take into account your financial circumstances, needs and objectives. Information is current at the date of issue and may change. Before making any decision based on this article, you should assess your own circumstances or seek advice from your financial adviser and accountant.