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Testamentary Trusts - What Happens When A Beneficiary Is A Minor

Date: January 12, 2011

Authors: Michael Pickering B.A., LL.B. (Hons.), LL.M., M. A.

Testamentary trusts are an effective vehicle for splitting business income. Problems arise, however if there are beneficiaries who are minors (i.e. under 18 years old).

Tax free threshold

Historically, minors have been treated as adults for tax purposes so that any income received by a child under 18 years of age was assessed at normal adult marginal tax rates. The tax free threshold applied. This changed with the introduction of Division 6AA of part III of the Income Tax Assessment act 1936(ITTA 1936).

Historically, therefore, a testamentary trust was an attractive method of splitting business income. The more children a taxpayer had, the more tax free thresholds could be accessed. Multiple children meant greater tax reductions.

The above amendment to the ITAA 1936 ended these income splitting advantages in respect of minors.

So what does Division 6AA of the ITAA 1936 provide?

The amendment was introduced with the express purpose of preventing taxpayers taking advantage of the adult tax free threshold and differential marginal tax rates where the minors had not earned the income upon which they were being assessed.

Now, Division 6AA now sets out specific rules relating to the tax payable on the assessable income of minors.

Penalty tax rates

Those rules are that income that has not been derived or earned by the minor will be assessed for income tax purposes by applying a low tax free threshold and penalty tax rates. The low tax-free threshold is $416.00 in the 2009/2010 financial year not including low income tax offsets. The penalty tax rates for 2009/2010 financial year are 66% between $418.00 and $1,300.07, and 45% above $1,380.00.

Exceptions to Division 6AA

There are a number of exceptions to this general rule within Division 6AA.

Essentially, a minor will be an “excepted person” if, on 30 June in the relevant financial year, the minor was:

  • Working full time or had worked full time for 3 months in the relevant financial year; or
  • Intending to work full time for all of the next financial year and not intending to study full time during that year; or
  • Entitled to a disability support pension or rehabilitation allowance or was the subject of a carer allowance and unable to care for themselves; or
  • Permanently blind; or
  • Disabled and were likely to suffer from that disability permanently for an extended time; or
  • Entitled to a double orphan pension and received negligible financial support from relatives; or
  • Unable to work full time because of a permanent mental or physical disability and received negligible financial support from relatives. 

If the minor is an “expected person” within the above exceptions, the penalty tax rates of Division 6AA will not apply and marginal tax rates will apply to all of the income of that minor/expected person.

If you need more taxation law advice about what to do if the beneficiary of a testamentary trust is a minor then contact LAC Lawyers Sydney: 1300 799 888 or Melbourne 1300 734 638.

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