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Penalty indexation makes stronger case for corporate trustee

The indexation of compliance penalty units announced in last week’s budget has reinforced the case for SMSFs to have a corporate trustee structure in place, a specialist lawyer has said.

The federal government stipulated administrative penalty units would increase in line with inflation, from $170 to $180 effective 31 July 2015.

This means the most severe compliance breaches such as lending to members and relatives, which attract 60 penalty units, will add up to a liability of $10,800 per SMSF trustee.

The government further confirmed this indexation would occur in line with the consumer price index every three years, with the next adjustment scheduled for 1 July 2018.

DBA Lawyers director Daniel Butler said under the new pricing scale three breaches, worth 60 penalty units each, would cost two individual trustees of one SMSF a total of $64,800.

But if those individuals were directors of a corporate trustee that administered the fund, the penalty units would only be levied once, resulting in a liability of $32,400 – a saving of $32,400.

“When these things happen they typically come in bunches, and the adviser who is not proposing a corporate trustee structure is delinquent because these are not things that won’t happen, these are things that are likely to happen and it’s just a matter of time,” Butler told selfmanagedsuper.

“The example I gave illustrates a $32,400 saving under the new system if you have a corporate trustee, but advisers are saying, ‘we’ll save you the $600 upfront’ for something that might end up costing you $32,400 down the track.”

Furthermore, SMSF trustees unwilling to replace an individual trustee structure with a corporate trustee arrangement due to complication and cost might only be postponing the inevitable, Butler said.

“When a member dies they’ll have to go through a similar process anyway,” he said.

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