Discretionary trusts that own ‘residential land' in New South Wales or hold an ownership interest in a company or unit trust that owns residential land in New South Wales must amend their trust deeds before 31 December 2020 to exclude foreign persons as beneficiaries, otherwise foreign land tax and duty surcharges may apply.

New South Wales now deems discretionary trusts to be ‘foreign persons', unless the trust deed is amended before midnight on 31 December 2020 to:

  • exclude all foreign persons as eligible beneficiaries
  • prevent any amendment to the exclusion of foreign persons as beneficiaries, so that the exclusion is permanent and irrevocable.

This is the case even if none of the eligible beneficiaries of a discretionary trust are foreign persons.

Why does this matter?

If a discretionary trust is deemed a ‘foreign person', surcharge duty of 8% and surcharge land tax of 2% will be payable on any residential land in New South Wales acquired or owned by the trust since the surcharges were introduced in 2016. This can also be the case where the discretionary trust is a shareholder or unitholder in a company or unit trust that owns the residential land.

Read our previous article here for more information.

What should you do?

  • Arrange for the trust deeds of any discretionary trusts that own residential land in New South Wales or hold an interest in a company or unit trust that owns residential land to be amended, where necessary and appropriate, to satisfy the ‘foreign person' exclusion requirements under these recent changes by New South Wales Parliament. This is the case even if the trust deed previously satisfied the New South Wales foreign beneficiary requirements.
  • Ensure any trust deed amendments are signed as soon as possible to avoid missing the 31 December 2020 deadline.
  • Submit the trust deed and all variations to Revenue NSW for confirmation that the trust is not a ‘foreign person'.

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