Key takeaways
- Understand what a Discretionary Trust is and its most common uses
- The tax treatment of Discretionary Trusts
What is a Discretionary Trust?
With a Discretionary Trust, the Trustees are given total control over the assets as well as the income generated. Under a Discretionary Trust, the Beneficiaries do not have an automatic right to receive the assets within the trust. Instead, the Trustees determine (at their ‘discretion’) when to divide the assets and how much each Beneficiary will receive.
The most common uses of a Discretionary Trust
Administration of the Discretionary Trust
Discretionary Trusts can be created during a person’s lifetime or upon death.
As the named Trustees have full control over who benefits from the trust, Beneficiaries do not have any automatic entitlement to trust income or capital. Trustees are able to determine:
- The amount of income paid out by the trust
- Which beneficiaries income payments are made to
- When and how often any income payments are made
Tax treatment of trusts
Settling assets into a discretionary trust (Entry Charge)
We cover PETs in more detail here.
Telling HMRC about potentially chargeable events via IHT100
The ten-year Periodic Charge
Payments of capital out of the trust (Exit Charge)
An ‘Exit Charge’ is calculated when capital (not income) is distributed to a Beneficiary. The rate of tax applied to the capital leaving the trust is based on:
- Exits recorded in the first ten years. The rate is calculated on a notional chargeable transfer of the trust assets immediately after they settled into trust. The effective rate is calculated based on notional tax charge of 30% of lifetime rate of 20% even if the trust was created on death.
- Exits recorded after the first periodic charge date. The rate of tax applied at the last ten year anniversary is recalculated using the nil-rate band at the time of exit.
In both cases, the rate is apportioned based on the number of quarters (three-month periods) elapsed since the trust’s inception or its last ten year anniversary.
- Where the Settlor dies within seven years of an earlier PET
- Where an exemption applies to reduce the Settlor’s Inheritance Tax as Exit Charges are based on the value to Trustees
- Where an asset that benefited from Business Relief or Agricultural Relief no longer qualifies, or has disposed of
- In cases where the trust is a Discretionary Will Trust (where the transferable nil-rate band is available) Periodic Charges and Exit Charges are only calculated using the standard nil-rate band