• News
  • Advocacy
  • Blog
  • Features
  • Magazines
  • Sponsored Content
  • News
  • Advocacy
  • Opinion
  • Podcasts
  • Features
  • Magazine
  • Sponsored Content
  • See more topics
    • Innovation
    • Wellness
    • Strategy
    • Advice
    • Professional Development
    • SME
    • Leadership
    • Intelligence
  • Innovation
  • Strategy
  • Wellness
  • Advice
  • Professional Development
  • SME
  • Leadership
  • Intelligence
SWITCH TO:
UK
Trust splitting: no longer an estate planning option?

Trust splitting: no longer an estate planning option?

by Scott Hay-Bartlem and Clinton Jackson | Aug 10, 2018 | Blog

A ‘trust split’ is a process of dividing the assets of a trust (generally a family discretionary trust) into a number of smaller sub-trusts to enable one group of beneficiaries to control certain trust assets and another group of beneficiaries to control other...

Most Read

Kirsten Fish, ATO second commissioner
IPA National Congress hears ATO plan to shrink small business “tax gap”

20 November, 2025

Ombudsman review targets ATO’s agent phone line failures

22 October, 2025

The WH Smith Error: how revenue recognition may have humbled an icon

21 October, 2025

1 in 3 Australians in their late 60s are still working, new HILDA survey shows

7 October, 2025

How to get control of your time

29 September, 2025

Embracing the AI frontier: Rethinking auditor skills and education

9 September, 2025

Problems in the post

2 September, 2025

5 million small business employees now have a right to disconnect from work unless it’s ‘unreasonable’. What does that mean?

1 September, 2025

Conway’s war on the regulation ‘quagmire’

28 August, 2025

Chalmers wins tail wind on tax reform from roundtable

26 August, 2025

About
Contact
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions
Advertise
IPA Corporate Site
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow

© INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS, ABN 81 004 130 643

About
Contact
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions
Advertise
IPA Corporate Site
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow

© INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS, ABN 81 004 130 643

SWITCH TO:
UK