• Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Before Header

Call us now  07 4688 2188

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Clifford Gouldson Lawyers

  • About
    • Our Origin Story
    • Our Future
    • Toowoomba
    • Brisbane
    • Sunshine Coast
    • What our clients say!
  • Careers
  • Supporting our Community
    • Bringing art to the business world
  • Contact Us
  • Search
  • About
    • Our Origin Story
    • Our Future
    • Toowoomba
    • Brisbane
    • Sunshine Coast
    • What our clients say!
  • Careers
  • Supporting our Community
    • Bringing art to the business world
  • Contact Us
  • Search

Mobile Menu

  • Our Team
  • Practice Areas
  • Knowledge
  • Events
  • Industries
  • For Individuals
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Our Team
  • Practice Areas
  • Knowledge
  • Events
  • Industries
  • For Individuals

New Rules for Trusts in Queensland: Are you ready?

You are here: Home / News / New Rules for Trusts in Queensland: Are you ready?

Big changes are on the horizon for trustees, beneficiaries, and advisors involved in trusts in Queensland. Major reforms impacting how trusts are managed, who can act as trustee, and what information must be shared with beneficiaries has been tabled in parliment.

The Trusts Bill 2025 (Bill) will replace the Trusts Act 1973 (Qld) (Act) with modernised and simplified legislation, streamlined with some new or substantially changed provisions to meet the needs of modern Queensland and remedy existing issues with the Act. The Bill broadly reflects recommendations from the Queensland Law Reform Commission (QLRC). This new legislation aims to ensure greater transparency and efficiency in the management and administration of trusts.

Key aspects of the Bill include:

Repealing and Replacing Obsolete Provisions

Repealing of provisions which are now obsolete or no longer appropriate/relevant in the context of modern trusts legislation, and replacing obsolete provisions with modernised powers, including:

  • conferring on trustees all the powers of an absolute owner of the trust property, subject to the trustee’s duties;
  • stating trustee’s minimum or ‘core’ duties that apply generally in administering a trust including:
    • a general duty of care;
    • a duty to act honestly and in good faith; and
    • a duty to keep trust accounts and make them available to beneficiaries upon request;
  • conferring a new power for a trustee to delegate the trustee’s investment powers;
  • limiting a trustee’s power to delegate generally to 12 months duration.

Trust Deeds may provide greater powers than the Bill, but the intention in modernising the legislation is to provide a greater ‘baseline’ set of powers for trustees.

Appointment and Eligibility of Trustees

Codifying a simplified process for appointment of trustee, meaning that such appointment is not necessarily exercisable by an appointor only, but rather by any other mechanism under the trust instrument, to be exercised in a reasonable period, after which time new mechanisms of appointment under the Bill will apply. However, the Bill also includes explicit restrictions on who is eligible to be appointed as trustee, as it prevents the following persons being appointed as a trustee:

  • children;
  • an individual who is insolvent under administration;
  • a Chapter 5 Body Corporate (a company which is being wound up, is under administration, or an receiver/manager has been appointed etc); and
  • any person who has been disqualified from being appointed as a trustee by a court under a new enshrined in clause 168 of the Bill.

Stronger Rights for Beneficiaries

The Bill strengthens the rights of beneficiaries, providing clearer guidelines on their entitlements and the information they are entitled to receive from trustees. This is accomplished through increasing the explicit threshold of capital which may be applied for the maintenance, advancement and education of beneficiaries and by empowering the court to more efficiently and effectively review administration of the trust, including new powers to:

  • review and reduce the amount of a trustee’s excessive remuneration;
  • to disqualify a person from being appointed as a trustee; and
  • to remove and replace office holders who have been appointed under the trust instrument where the court deems appropriate.

The Trusts Bill 2025 represents a significant step forward in the regulation of trusts in Australia, promoting transparency, accountability, and fairness in the management of trust assets. We will provide additional updates regarding the progress of the Bill through Parliament as they become available.

If you have any questions in relation to the Trusts Bill, please do not hesitate to contact our Wills, Estate Planning + Structuring Team, or our Business + Corporate Advisory Team.


For further information contact Sheelagh Gray.

The assistance of Patrick Gellatly, Lawyer, in researching this article is gratefully acknowledged.

Previous Post: « Yes, crypto currency is personal property!
Next Post: The New Property Law Act – Quickfire Q&A »

Primary Sidebar

We can help

Amanda Tolson

Director

Brian Conrick

Senior Consultant

Brooke Giblin

Legal Secretary & Personal Assistant

Melanie Sharpe

Lawyer

Sheelagh Gray

Section Head - Wills, Estates, Planning + Structuring

Ben Gouldson

Managing Director and Trade Marks Attorney*

Patrick Gellatly

Lawyer

Michelle Broome

Lawyer

Bernadette Kelly

Senior Paralegal

Related Alerts

January 17, 2025
Executor of a Will: Challenges and Solutions

Losing a loved one is an emotionally draining experience. For many this is followed...

November 20, 2024
Christmas and Planning for the Future

Christmas is a time for connection, reflection, and sharing. It’s when we gather with...

August 14, 2024
Secure your family’s future: The power of testamentary trust wills

Many people approach their estate planning wanting to “keep it simple”. But if you...

View other alerts

Footer

Clifford Gouldson Lawyers

CLIFFORD GOULDSON LAWYERS
P: 07 4688 2188
F: 07 4688 2199
mail@cglaw.com.au
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Locations

TOOWOOMBA (Head Office)
259 Ruthven Street,
Toowoomba Q 4350

PO Box 8208,
Toowoomba South Q 4350

Toowoomba Office

BRISBANE
Level 5, 231 George Street,
Brisbane Q 4000

PO Box 12802 George Street,
Brisbane Q 4003

Brisbane Office

 

SUNSHINE COAST
Regatta Corporate Building, Office 3,
Ground Floor, Innovation Parkway,
Birtinya Q 4575

Locked Bag 5010
Caloundra DC Q 4551

Sunshine Coast Office

Practice Areas

  • Property + Business Transactions
  • Workplace
  • Litigation + Dispute Resolution
  • Intellectual Property + Technology
  • Wills, Estates, Planning + Structuring
  • Business + Corporate Advisory
  • Construction
  • Privacy & Disclaimer
  • Terms of Use

Site Footer

CG Law (Trading) Pty Ltd ACN 143 426 028 t/a Clifford Gouldson Lawyers ABN 89 143 426 028 Liability limited by a scheme approved under professional standards legislation.

The contents of this website are provided solely for general information purposes and do not constitute legal or other professional advice. Clifford Gouldson Lawyers expressly disclaims any liability arising from the use or reliance on the information provided. If you require legal or other expert advice or assistance, then you should seek our help or the services of a qualified professional.

Copyright © 2025 Clifford Gouldson Lawyers · Privacy & Disclaimer · Terms of Use · Marketing by John Gray Marketing · Site by Kingfisher