Unit Trust Lawyers

If you are setting up a unit trust, entering into a joint venture, bringing in investors or reviewing an existing trust structure, our unit trust lawyers can help you get the structure right.

Our experienced business structure lawyers provide practical advice on unit trusts, unit trust deeds, corporate trustees, unitholders agreements, unit transfers, joint venture structures, trust deed reviews, restructuring and trust disputes.

What is a unit trust?

A unit trust is a trust where beneficial ownership is divided into units. Each unitholder generally has an interest in the trust based on the number and class of units they hold.

For example, if two investors each hold 50% of the units in a unit trust, they will usually have fixed entitlements that reflect those interests, subject to the terms of the trust deed.

The trustee holds and manages the trust assets for the benefit of the unitholders. The trustee may be an individual, but it is common to use a corporate trustee for commercial, investment and joint venture structures.

A unit trust can provide more certainty than a discretionary trust where unrelated parties are investing together because ownership interests are fixed and identifiable.

Is a unit trust the right structure for you?

A unit trust may be suitable where multiple parties want to invest, own assets or carry on a venture together through fixed ownership interests.

It may be appropriate where you want to:

  • bring unrelated investors into a business or investment structure;
  • hold property or commercial assets with fixed ownership interests;
  • create a joint venture structure;
  • separate ownership interests from day-to-day management;
  • allow units to be transferred or issued over time;
  • record each party’s economic interest clearly; or
  • combine the unit trust with a company, discretionary trust or holding structure.

However, a unit trust is not always the best structure. Depending on your circumstances, a company, discretionary trust, fixed trust or partnership may be more appropriate. There may also be tax, duty, land tax, asset protection and control issues to consider.

Revenue NSW explains that, for land tax purposes, a unit trust may be treated as a special trust, fixed trust or family unit trust depending on whether the relevant criteria are met. This is particularly important if the unit trust will hold land in New South Wales.

Our unit trust lawyers can help you decide whether a unit trust is suitable and how it should fit within your broader commercial structure.

For more detail, you can also read our pages on fixed unit trusts and How to Access the Land Tax Threshold in a Trust.

How does a unit trust differ from a discretionary trust?

The key difference is how beneficiaries or unitholders benefit from the trust.

In a discretionary trust, the trustee usually has discretion to decide which beneficiaries receive income or capital, and in what amounts. This can provide flexibility, especially in family or asset protection structures.

In a unit trust, the unitholders generally have fixed interests based on the units they hold. This can provide greater certainty where unrelated parties are contributing money, owning assets or investing together.

A unit trust may be more appropriate where each party wants their interest to be clearly recorded. A discretionary trust may be more appropriate where flexibility and family wealth planning are more important.

We can help you compare both structures and decide which is more suitable for your business, investment or joint venture.

Do you need a unitholders agreement?

In many cases, yes.

A unit trust deed sets out the legal framework for the trust. However, a unitholders agreement can deal with the commercial relationship between unitholders in more detail.

A unitholders agreement can address:

  • how decisions are made;
  • voting thresholds and approval rights;
  • funding obligations;
  • issue and transfer of units;
  • restrictions on dealing with units;
  • valuation and exit mechanisms;
  • deadlocks and disputes; and
  • what happens if a unitholder defaults, dies, becomes insolvent or wants to exit.

Without a unitholders agreement, disputes can become harder to resolve, particularly where parties have different expectations about control, funding, profits, management or exit rights.

We can advise whether a unitholders agreement is required and prepare one that works with the unit trust deed.

When should you review or amend a unit trust deed?

A unit trust deed should be reviewed whenever the trust is being used for a significant transaction, investment, restructure or change in ownership.

You should consider reviewing your unit trust deed if:

  • the trust was established many years ago;
  • new investors or unitholders are being introduced;
  • units are being issued, transferred or redeemed;
  • the trust is acquiring or selling significant assets;
  • the trust is being used for a property development or joint venture;
  • the trustee or corporate trustee structure is changing; or
  • there are concerns about the vesting date, amendment powers or trustee powers.

Amending a unit trust deed requires care. The deed must allow the amendment, the correct process must be followed and potential tax or duty consequences should be considered before changes are made.

We can review your unit trust deed, identify key risks and advise on whether amendments are required.

Unit Trust Services We Offer

Unit trusts are commonly used for business ventures, investments, property ownership and joint ventures. We assist with the establishment, review, variation, administration and dispute resolution of unit trust structures.

Trust Establishment

We can establish unit trusts and prepare the documents required to set them up properly. This may include the unit trust deed, trustee consents and initial unit issue documents.

Trust Deed Reviews

We review unit trust deeds to ensure they reflect the intended structure, including reviewing distribution provisions and transfer restrictions.

Trust Variations

We prepare and advise on deed variations where an existing unit trust needs to be updated, including changes to trustees, transfer provisions or voting arrangements.

Unit Issues and Transfers

We prepare and advise on the issue, transfer, redemption and restructuring of units, including unit transfer forms, unitholder approvals and sale documents.

Unitholders Agreements

We prepare and review unitholders agreements. These agreements are particularly important where unrelated parties are carrying on a venture together.

Joint Ventures

We advise on using unit trusts for property developments and investment arrangements, including structuring ownership interests and profit distributions.

Why seek advice before setting up or changing a unit trust?

A unit trust can be a strong structure for shared ownership, investment and commercial projects, but the details matter. Getting advice early helps ensure the unit trust is properly established, properly documented and aligned with the commercial relationship between the parties.

Fixed Ownership

We help ensure each party’s ownership interests are properly documented. This gives unitholders greater certainty about their rights, entitlements and obligations.

Investor Protection

We help document funding obligations, exit rights and dispute mechanisms. This protects investors and reduces the risk of future disagreement about money, control or returns.

Clear Control

We advise on trustee control, voting thresholds, approval rights and reserved matters. This reduces confusion about who can make decisions, incur liabilities, issue units or transfer units.

Exit Certainty

We advise on unit transfers, pre-emptive rights, buy-out processes and default events. This helps avoid uncertainty when a unitholder wants to leave, sell, retire or resolve a dispute.

How our unit trust setup process works

We make the unit trust setup process simple and transparent. Here’s what to expect:

We’re here to structure
your trust properly

Our unit trust lawyers help you establish, review and amend unit trust structures with clarity, confidence and commercial purpose.

Why choose us for your unit trust advice?

Our unit trust lawyers provide practical advice, tailored documents and commercially focused support for business owners, investors, trustees and unitholders.

Commercial Structuring

We consider the commercial purpose of the unit trust before documents are prepared. This helps ensure the structure is fit for purpose from the beginning.

Clear Advice

Unit trusts can involve technical legal and tax concepts, but the practical issues need to be understood clearly. We explain who controls the trust, how units work and where the risks are.

Tailored Documents

We prepare and review trust documents that reflect your actual arrangements. Proper documents reduce uncertainty and make future changes easier to manage.

Dispute Awareness

We understand where unit trust disputes usually arise and draft with those risks in mind. We help put protections in place before the relationship breaks down.