Trust structures for property investors
Discretionary family trusts, fixed trusts, and unit trusts are common structures for Australian property investors. Each has specific tax and asset-protection characteristics. The wrong structure for your profile costs more than it saves; the right one creates meaningful flexibility.
The three common structures
1. Discretionary (family) trust
- Trustee makes annual distributions to beneficiaries at discretion
- Income can be split among family members at low marginal rates
- Strong asset protection (the trust, not you, owns the property)
- Land tax treatment worse in most states (special/trust rates)
- Loans typically more expensive and harder to obtain
- CGT discount available to individual beneficiaries
2. Fixed trust
- Beneficiaries have fixed entitlements
- Land tax often treated more like individual ownership (accesses threshold in NSW)
- Income allocation fixed (can’t redirect year-to-year)
- Less flexibility but generally clearer tax treatment
3. Unit trust
- Beneficiaries hold units (like shares); income distributed proportionally
- Common for multi-party property ventures (siblings pooling capital, friends investing together)
- Units can be redeemed for cash (subject to unit pricing)
- CGT treatment depends on nature of trust
The negative gearing catch
Losses in a discretionary trust cannot flow through to beneficiaries. They are trapped in the trust, carried forward to offset future trust income. For a negatively geared property, this means:
- The $20k annual loss can’t offset your salary
- The loss sits in the trust until the property turns positive or is sold
- The CGT on eventual sale uses the loss at that point
Upshot: negative gearing via discretionary trust is usually worse than personal ownership for a single investor. The tax benefit is deferred, sometimes by 10+ years.
The positive gearing advantage
For positively geared properties, a discretionary trust can distribute income to low-income family members, substantially reducing the effective tax rate on the rental surplus. Example: $20k of positive net income distributed to a non-working spouse or adult child at 19% marginal rate saves roughly $3,600/year in tax vs distribution to you at 37%.
The CGT consideration
CGT discount (50% on assets held 12+ months) flows through to individual beneficiaries of a discretionary trust. So on sale, the capital gain passes through to the beneficiary and they apply the 50% discount at their marginal rate.
However, trusts themselves cannot use the 50% CGT discount directly. Beneficiaries must be individuals (or another trust) to access it. Corporate beneficiaries of a trust do not receive the discount.
The lending reality
Lending to trusts is materially harder than to individuals:
- Fewer lenders participate (especially for discretionary trusts)
- Interest rates 10-30 bps higher on average
- Requires personal guarantees from the trustee and usually the controlling individual
- Serviceability can be assessed on trust income, beneficiary income, or both
For investors still building the portfolio, simplicity often wins. Trusts make sense for the 3rd, 4th, 5th property - not the first or second.
Land tax consequences
Quick state summary:
- NSW: discretionary trusts get no land tax threshold unless structured as “fixed trust” with precise documentation
- VIC: trusts attract special surcharge rates
- QLD: higher rates on trust-held property
- WA, SA: trusts treated more conventionally
The land tax penalty in a trust can be $5k-$15k/year more than individual ownership, on a modest portfolio.
Asset protection
The strongest argument for a discretionary trust is asset protection. If you are a high-liability professional (medical, legal, executive) who may face claims, property held in a trust is generally more protected than property in your personal name.
For lower-liability professions, the asset protection value is smaller. It may not justify the land tax and lending costs.
When to use a trust
- You’re a high-liability professional wanting asset protection
- You have 3+ properties and income is high enough to benefit from distribution to family
- You’ve discussed the full framework with a property-tax accountant
- You understand trust law enough to distinguish marketing from substance
When not to
- You’re buying your first or second investment property
- You’re negatively geared at a top marginal rate
- Your family circumstances don’t support income distribution (single, or single-income)
- You’re uncomfortable with the ongoing compliance (annual tax return, trustee resolutions, ATO reporting)