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Bare Trust

A trust where the beneficiary is entitle to the assets at 18

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Written by Emma Rylance
Updated over 8 months ago

What is a Bare Trust?

If you leave your estate absolutely to your children or grandchildren without stipulating an age they have to reach before receiving their inheritance, your Will automatically creates a Bare Trust for any of them who are under 18.

A Bare Trust is a type of trust where the beneficiary becomes absolutely entitled to the capital in the trust at the age of 18. Until they reach 18, the trustees have no active powers except the duty to hold the legal title to the trust assets and invest them appropriately.

Before the child reaches 18, both capital and income from the trust can be used for the child’s benefit, but not for the benefit of any other beneficiaries in your Will.

Who owns the Bare Trust?

For tax purposes, the beneficiary is treated as the owner of the trust assets. This means a bare trust arrangement is tax efficient from an income and capital gains tax perspective as they are applied at the child’s marginal rates. There is no inheritance tax while the trust exists or when the assets pass to the beneficiary at age 18.

However, the trust assets become part of the child’s estate for inheritance tax purposes. If the child were to die before reaching 18, the assets would pass via the intestacy rules. In that case, inheritance tax may be charged if the value exceeded the child’s tax-free allowance.

The risk of the assets passing under the intestacy rules is one of the main reasons people often do not want to create a Bare Trust under a Will and instead choose to stipulate an age when minors are entitled to receive their benefit.

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