Once assets are genuinely settled into an irrevocable trust, they no longer belong to any individual — which ring-fences family wealth from business failure, personal guarantees and future creditors.
The settlor gives up ownership to the trust. Because the assets are no longer the settlor's (or any single beneficiary's), they are generally beyond the reach of that person's creditors. For a promoter who signs personal guarantees, holding the family home and core investments in a trust can be the difference between a setback and losing everything.
An irrevocable discretionary trust is common for pure protection — no beneficiary has a fixed, attachable right. The trade-off is MMR on income (Section 307, old 164), so it suits families holding appreciating assets that distribute little income. Where regular income matters, a specific trust protects assets while taxing income at beneficiaries' slabs — see how a trust is taxed.
Asset protection is not hiding assets or dodging genuine dues — it's legitimate, forward-looking structuring done in good time.
We draft the deed, structure the trustees and beneficiaries, and get the tax outcome right.
💬 Plan my family trust