SMSF and their Prohibition on Lending and Financial Assistance
  1. Overview
  2. Articles
  3. FAQs
  4. Lawyers
  5. Case Studies

SMSF and their Prohibition on Lending and Financial Assistance

Prohibition on Lending

A self-managed superannuation fund (SMSF) is prohibited from making loans to members or their relatives.

What complicates matters is that “loan” in this case is defined to go far beyond what normally constitutes a loan. This could result in confusion amongst SMSF members as to whether an action taken by their fund is in breach of the no loans rule.

An SMSF will count as making a loan to an individual if:

  • it lends money to the individual;
  • it sells goods or land to the individual on credit;
  • it sells something to the individual and permits instalment payments; or
  • it defers a debt that the individual owes to the SMSF.

Further, a “loan” covers informal and unenforceable arrangements as well as arrangements that have no particular purpose of gain for the individual or SMSF.

If you are concerned that your SMSF may inadvertently have breached the prohibition on lending, then call LAC today on 1300 799 888 (Sydney) or 1300 734 638 (Melbourne).

Prohibition on financial assistance

A self-managed superannuation fund (SMSF) is prohibited from using its resources to provide financial assistance to members or their relatives, even if the financial assistance is not a “loan”.

The rule covers all forms of assistance that are financial in nature but are not loans. This includes guarantees, indemnities, securities, charges, or any other arrangement that is to provide financial assistance.

The rule also applies even if the resources of the SMSF are not actually affected by the assistance, such as a guarantee that is never enforced. All that is needed is that the resources of the SMSF are “used”.

Example: “Using resources of the fund”

J and K are husband and wife and trustees of their SMSF. They also, as individuals, run a tuition business for schoolchildren. This business requires large quantities of stationery.

J and K are acquiring their stationery at retail prices from a supplier in Burwood. Even though they save by buying in bulk, they still end up paying quite a lot. They wrack their brains trying to find a source of cheap stationery.

Then a local stationery import business comes up for sale. It happens to have existing contracts with sources of stationery and can acquire stationery wholesale at a considerably lower cost than retail.

J and K realise that, if they use their SMSF to purchase the import business, they can cause the business to sell them stationery at cost price. This would be a large saving.

The SMSF acquires the business and supplies stationery to J and K. The business is highly successful and the SMSF makes large returns on its investment.

This action would breach the prohibition on financial assistance. Even though the SMSF actually gained from its investment and its resources were not diminished, this does not prevent J and K’s actions from constituting financial assistance to themselves.

Conclusion

If you are concerned that your SMSF might be providing financial assistance to members or their relatives, call LAC today on 1300 799 888 (Sydney) or 1300 734 638 (Melbourne).

  1. Overview
  2. Articles
  3. FAQs
  4. Lawyers
  5. Case Studies