Trusts in plain English — UK 2026/27
Trusts have a reputation for being complex, expensive and only for the wealthy. They can be all of those, but they can also be straightforward, cheap to set up, and genuinely useful for a much wider audience than most people realise. This guide cuts through the jargon: what a trust actually is, the four main types UK retail might encounter, the IHT mechanics that scare people, and when a trust genuinely solves a problem vs adds complexity.
What a trust actually is
A trust is a legal arrangement where one person (the settlor) gives assets to another person (the trustee) to hold for the benefit of a third (the beneficiary). The trustee owns the assets legally; the beneficiary owns them beneficially.
The key point: once assets are in a trust, they're not owned by the settlor anymore (with some specific exceptions). This is what makes trusts useful for:
- Removing assets from your estate for IHT purposes (gradually, with rules)
- Controlling when and how beneficiaries receive money (a child gets the fund at 25, not 18)
- Protecting assets from external risks (divorce, bankruptcy of beneficiary)
- Managing assets for someone who can't manage them themselves (minor children, disabled adults)
- Splitting income between family members for tax efficiency (less effective now than it was)
The three parties
| Role | Who they are | What they do |
|---|---|---|
| Settlor | The person putting assets into the trust | Transfers assets; sets up the trust deed defining the rules; usually steps back after |
| Trustee | The legal owner of the trust assets | Holds assets, makes investment decisions, distributes income or capital to beneficiaries per the trust deed |
| Beneficiary | The person who benefits from the trust | Receives income, capital, or both, per the trust's rules. May have an absolute right (bare trust) or a contingent one (discretionary) |
Some trusts have multiple trustees (typically 2-4) and multiple beneficiaries. The settlor can sometimes also be a trustee, and rarely a beneficiary — though "settlor-interested" trusts have specific tax disadvantages.
The four main types of UK trusts
1. Bare trust (the simplest)
The beneficiary has an absolute right to the trust assets — they own them beneficially and can demand them whenever they want (subject to age, if a minor). The trustee just holds the assets in their name temporarily.
Tax treatment:
- The beneficiary is treated as owning the trust assets directly
- Income tax: paid at the beneficiary's marginal rate
- CGT: paid at the beneficiary's marginal rate, with their personal annual exempt amount
- IHT: no special trust IHT charges; the assets are in the beneficiary's estate
Common use cases:
- Holding investments for minor children (e.g. Junior ISAs, kid-named GIA holdings)
- Holding property in trust for someone who can't legally hold it (e.g. a minor inheriting a house)
- Simple "I'll hold this for you until you're 18" arrangements
Bare trusts are usually set up in a few hundred pounds of legal fees and have minimal ongoing complexity.
2. Life Interest Trust (Interest-In-Possession)
One beneficiary (the "life tenant") has the right to income from the trust during their lifetime. When they die, the capital passes to other beneficiaries (the "remaindermen") per the trust deed.
Classic use case: a husband leaves his estate in trust. His widow has the right to the income (or to live in the family home) for her lifetime. When she dies, the capital goes to the husband's children from a previous marriage. This balances providing for the second spouse while preserving capital for first-marriage children.
Tax treatment for trusts set up in a will (Immediate Post-Death Interest, IPDI):
- The life tenant is treated as owning the trust assets for IHT
- Income tax paid at the life tenant's rate
- CGT on disposals: trust pays at 20% (or 24% for property)
- On the life tenant's death: trust assets are in their estate for IHT
Tax treatment for trusts set up during life (post-2006):
- Treated as "relevant property" trust — the same IHT regime as discretionary trusts
- This made lifetime life interest trusts much less attractive after 2006
3. Discretionary Trust
The trustees have discretion over which beneficiaries receive income and capital, and when. No beneficiary has a fixed entitlement. Often the trust deed names a "class" of potential beneficiaries (e.g. "my children and grandchildren") and the trustees decide who gets what.
Why use one:
- Maximum flexibility for the trustees to respond to changing circumstances
- Protect assets from beneficiaries' creditors / spouses / divorce / bankruptcy — if no one has a fixed entitlement, the assets can't be claimed
- IHT planning — gifts into discretionary trust are "chargeable lifetime transfers" that fall outside the estate after 7 years (with some complications)
- Manage assets for vulnerable or unreliable beneficiaries who shouldn't have direct access
The IHT mechanic that scares people: the 10-year periodic charge:
- Every 10 years, the trust value (over the NRB of £325k) is charged IHT at 6%
- This is a relatively modest charge but it's a regular tax on accumulated trust capital
- For a trust worth £1m: every 10 years, IHT of approximately £40,500 (6% × £675k) is due
- Exit charges apply when capital leaves the trust (pro-rated based on time since last 10-year charge)
The 6% / 10-year charge sounds painful but compare it to 40% IHT on the estate — for assets you want to keep out of the estate AND control for multiple generations, the trust IHT charges can be lower than estate IHT.
4. Accumulation & Maintenance Trust / Bereaved Minors Trust
Specialist trusts for minor children. Once the dominant child trust type pre-2006; replaced by 18-25 trusts and Bereaved Minors Trusts after the 2006 reforms.
Bereaved Minors Trust:
- Set up via a parent's will for their child under 18
- Income may be used for the child's maintenance; capital must be paid out at age 18
- Treated as the child's asset for IHT (no relevant-property charges)
- Income tax at the child's rate (with parental settlement anti-avoidance rules if you put it in)
18-25 Trust:
- Similar but assets are paid out at age 25 instead of 18
- The 7-year period between 18 and 25 has slightly different IHT treatment (an exit charge applies on capital paid out before 25)
Standard advice: if you want children to inherit at 18 only, no special trust needed. If you want delay to 21, 25 or 30, an 18-25 trust or a discretionary trust within the will is the structure.
UK trust tax rates 2026/27
| Tax | Discretionary trust rate | Life interest trust (IPDI) | Bare trust |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income tax on income | 45% (39.35% dividends) | Life tenant's marginal rate | Beneficiary's marginal rate |
| Standard rate band | First £500 of income taxed at basic rate | N/A | N/A |
| CGT | 24% (20% non-property) | 24% (20%) | Beneficiary's rate |
| CGT annual exempt amount | £1,500 | £1,500 | Beneficiary's £3,000 |
| IHT on entry (lifetime gift) | 20% above NRB (chargeable lifetime transfer) | Same as discretionary if lifetime | 7-year PET rule |
| 10-year IHT charge | 6% on value > NRB | N/A for IPDI; 6% for lifetime IIP | None |
Critical observation: trust income tax rates (45%) are significantly higher than personal rates. This is why trustees often distribute income to beneficiaries quickly — the beneficiary pays at their lower rate, and the trust reclaims the difference via tax credits.
When trusts make sense for UK retail
Life insurance held in trust
Almost universally a good idea for life insurance worth more than ~£25,000. Removes the policy proceeds from your estate for IHT (potentially saving 40% of the payout). See our life insurance in trust guide.
Protecting inheritance from minor / vulnerable children
If your child is too young, has a disability, has substance abuse issues, or is in a precarious marriage, a discretionary trust within your will protects their inheritance from being mismanaged or claimed by external parties. The trustees can use discretion to pay for their needs without giving them direct access.
Blended families
A life interest trust in your will lets you provide for a second spouse during their lifetime while ensuring capital eventually passes to your first-marriage children. Avoids the common scenario where a surviving second spouse rewrites their will to favour their own children, disinheriting yours.
Substantial IHT planning
For estates likely to face significant IHT, gifting into a discretionary trust uses your NRB (£325k every 7 years can be put in tax-free) and removes future growth from your estate. Combined with other IHT strategies, a meaningful IHT reduction is achievable over 10-20 years.
Business continuity
Family business shares can be held in trust to preserve control across generations and protect against fragmentation. Often combined with
When trusts don't make sense
- Small estates (under £500k single, £1m couple) — no IHT to plan for; simpler will suffices
- Single beneficiary, mature, financially competent — just leave the assets directly
- Pure tax avoidance ambitions — HMRC has aggressively pursued trust schemes since 2006; complex tax-avoidance trusts often fail or attract penalties
- "Just because" — trusts add ongoing complexity (annual tax returns, trustee meetings, registration requirements). Don't set one up without a clear reason.
Trust Registration Service (TRS)
Since 2017, most UK trusts must register with HMRC's Trust Registration Service:
- Initial registration within 90 days of trust creation
- Annual updates if the trust has tax consequences
- Beneficial ownership disclosure: trustees, settlor, named beneficiaries (or class of beneficiaries) all logged
- Penalties for non-compliance: warnings escalating to fines
Most trust types fall within TRS scope. Bare trusts holding under £100 of income or simple "child savings" structures may be exempt; check before assuming.
Cost of setting up a trust
| Trust type | Setup cost (typical) | Annual admin cost |
|---|---|---|
| Bare trust | £0-£300 | £0-£200 (tax return if applicable) |
| Life insurance trust | £0-£200 (insurer often provides free) | £0 |
| Bereaved Minors Trust (in a will) | Included in will cost | £200-£500 |
| Discretionary trust | £500-£1,500 | £300-£1,500 (tax returns) |
| Life interest trust (in a will) | Included in will cost | £300-£800 |
| Complex IHT planning trust | £1,500-£5,000+ | £1,000-£3,000+ |
Frequently asked questions
Can I put my house in a trust to avoid care home fees?
This is a common question with a complicated answer. If you transfer your house to a trust while you still need it (i.e. continue to live in it), it's a "Gift with Reservation of Benefit" — treated as still in your estate for IHT and for care home assessment purposes (deliberate deprivation). Genuine trust planning for care home protection requires giving up beneficial use, which most people don't actually want to do. Specialist advice essential; many "asset protection trust" schemes sold by unregulated firms don't work.
Are trusts only for the wealthy?
No. Life insurance trusts cost £0 to set up (insurer provides templates) and protect any size of policy. Bare trusts for children's investments are cheap and standard. Bereaved Minors Trusts within a will are essentially free. Discretionary trusts have setup costs, but the threshold where they make sense is around £200k+ in the trust — not huge. The "trusts are for millionaires" idea is outdated.
What's the "Trust Registration Service" deadline?
Within 90 days of creating the trust, or by 1 September 2022 for trusts already in existence at September 2022. Annual updates if the trust has tax consequences. Trustees who miss registration face fines (currently £100 + £5/day penalty).
Can the settlor be a trustee?
Yes for most trusts. The settlor commonly serves as a trustee, especially of trusts they create for family members. Watch the "settlor-interested" rules: if the settlor (or their spouse / minor children) can benefit from the trust, the income tax falls back on the settlor at their marginal rate. This is usually a planning trap, not a feature.
Can I undo a trust?
Once assets are in a trust, the settlor generally can't take them back. The trustees can wind up a trust (distribute all assets to beneficiaries), which can trigger CGT and IHT exit charges. "Vesting" a trust on its termination date is normal practice; reversing a trust because the settlor changed their mind is not legally available.
Are pensions held in trust?
Most UK occupational and personal pensions are held under a trust structure — that's why pension death benefits are outside the deceased's estate for IHT (until the 2027 reform changes this for unused DC pension funds). Pension trusts are a specialised area; they aren't usually drafted by retail investors but they ARE trusts.
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