Latest News

SMEs to be hit hardest by new trust tax reforms

Australia’s proposed discretionary trust tax reforms could put a significant financial burden on small and family-run businesses, an advisory firm has warned.

.

According to Greg Bartels, director of Halo Advisory, sweeping reforms to capital gains and discretionary trusts in the budget could have the greatest impact on mum-and-dad businesses in the SME sector. 

In a recent opinion piece, Bartels said that under the current system, trust income is generally distributed to beneficiaries and taxed at their individual marginal tax rates. Yet, under the proposed framework, trustees would effectively pay a flat 30 per cent tax upfront, with beneficiaries receiving non-refundable tax credits. 

Discretionary trusts are widely used across Australia because they offer flexibility and asset protection for business owners operating in inherently risky environments. 

So, why would small businesses be impacted the most? 

At the moment, small businesses are often seen as the greatest beneficiaries of discretionary trusts, as they offer flexibility in distributing profits to family members in lower tax brackets, help shield business assets from personal liabilities, and allow for a 50 per cent discount on CGT.

But under the proposed reforms, many of these businesses may face a higher effective tax burden purely because of the structure they use to operate safely and efficiently.

Trustees will effectively pay a flat 30 per cent tax upfront on distributions. While beneficiaries receive corresponding tax credits, those credits are non-refundable. 

For high-income earners already paying tax above 30 per cent, the practical impact may be limited. 

However, Bartels said that for everyday SMEs that rely on discretionary trusts for flexibility, succession planning, and asset protection, the reforms could materially increase the overall tax burden and affect cash flow, despite no change in underlying business profitability. 

“For many small business families, the concern is not just about tax – it’s about cash flow,” he said. 

“Businesses could end up paying materially more tax despite earning the same income.”

Analysis from Halo Advisory suggested the reforms have the potential to force many SMEs to reconsider long-standing business structures designed around asset protection and succession planning.

“Operating through a trust structure has often been about protecting the family home or separating business risk from personal assets,” Bartels said. 

“The challenge now is that maintaining those protections may come with a significantly higher ongoing tax cost.” 

If a husband-and-wife business operating through a discretionary family trust generated $200,000 in annual profit, under the current regulations, distributing profits evenly may result in an effective family tax rate of approximately 22 per cent. 

However, under the proposed changes, the situation is seemingly more unfortunate as the family’s tax burden may increase substantially because excess tax credits cannot be refunded, resulting in a direct reduction in household cash flow. 

For many SMEs already managing rising wages, Bartel said that supply chain costs, insurance increases, interest rate pressure, and losing an additional $10,000–$20,000 in annual liquidity could materially affect hiring decisions, reinvestment plans, and long-term business stability. 

Accordingly, many business owners are depicting the reforms not as a tax impartiality measure, but moreso as a structural reset for the SME sector. 

As such, for many SMEs, restructuring will be more than just a basic practice; it could fundamentally change how their businesses operate in the long term. 

These concerns are leading to many critiques and particular business owners questioning, what does the future look like for small businesses? 

Many small business owners are not large-scale tax minimisers and are simply trying to build sustainable businesses that employ staff. 

Such reforms not only impose an additional burden on these SMEs in terms of cash flow, but also, when small businesses lose liquidity, reduce investment, hiring, and overall business growth. 

Regardless of whether these reforms proceed in their current form or evolve through consultation, Bartels said, business owners should begin assessing their structures now.

 

 

 

 

 

27 May 2026
Miranda Brownlee
accountantsdaily.com.au

Hot Issues

Article archive

Accounting & Taxation

We provide you with the most appropriate advice tailored to your business.

Our Accounting & Taxation Services include and are not limited to:

  • Personal taxation returns
  • Business taxation returns
  • Late, problem and multiple year taxation returns
  • Taxation planning
  • Business accounting and bookkeeping
  • Business consultancy including establishment of company and trust structures
  • ASIC requirements
  • Payroll management
Contact Us

Late & Problem Returns

This is when people or businesses are late with their BAS statements, Tax Returns and have been accruing debts such as fines and interest to the ATO as they have ignored the ATO.

I have been extremely successful in reducing tax debts in these instances. Two examples:

One client came to us owing $220,000 and 3 years behind. I brought all their BAS and tax return up-to-date and obtained a reduction of $160,000 in penalties and interest. We then entered them into a repayment program for the $60,000 which they have just finished paying off.

Another client had 18 months BAS outstanding and two years of tax returns. He had a tax debt of $62,000 with penalties. I was able to get a reduction of $37,000 in fines and penalties leaving him with a debt of $25,000 of which he still owes $5,000.

Both clients are very happy with these outcomes. Also, after I obtained the reductions and kept them up-to-date with their BAS and Tax Returns they have not only kept up repayments but have managed to ensure that all current BAS and payments have been kept up to date as well.

If you find yourself in a similar position then we are most likely able to help.

Contact Us

Personal Tax Returns

Protecting and enhancing your wealth requires professional and comprehensive management of your personal tax position as well as any business and other entities you have.

A good personal tax strategy goes a long way to maximising the return you get from owning a private business, or earning a good salary, or being a high net worth individual. Even after a few years work you may be starting to think about safeguarding your family’s future or simply seeking a new perspective and fresh advice.

Regardless of your stage in life we offer a comprehensive approach to planning that will help you take control of your future.

We can help you to:

  • Look to ensure you obtain the maximum return from your employment.
  • Plan effectively for your retirement and optimise the use of superannuation.
  • Develop a succession plan for the transition of your business or personal structures to the next generation.
  • Resolve queries or disputes with the Australian Taxation Office.
  • Prepare an effective estate plan that ensures the right assets end up in the right hands at the right time.

By will work with you to understand your life objectives and then develop a plan that is will help get you there. Contact us for further discussion or information.

Contact Us

Business Advice

I like a lot of Accountants use management information to track how a business is going. I also have actually managed a number of different types of businesses and taken them from losses to profit so I am able to advise clients on how to run their businesses including staff, computer programs, marketing of their product etc.

Contact Us

Tax Diary

General Calculators

 

Accounting Videos

Secure File Transfer

Secure File Transfer is a facility that allows the safe and secure exchange of confidential files or documents between you and us.

Email is very convenient in our business world, there is no doubting that. However email messages and attachments can be intercepted by third parties, putting your privacy and identity at risk if used to send confidential files or documents. Secure File Transfer eliminates this risk.

Login to Secure File Transfer, or contact us if you require a username and password.

Online Booking

Privacy Policy

In order to comply with the requirements of the Privacy Act, we are required to advise you that this firm holds personal information about you. The information has been and will continue to be collected by us for the purpose of providing you with financial services including:

We are required, pursuant to the Corporations Act, certain regulations issued by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission and the Rules of Professional Conduct of the Financial Planning Association, of which this organisation is a principal member, to collect information about you for the purpose of providing you with the services referred to above.

If you do not provide us with the information requested by us we may not be able to provide you with the services required.

We will from time to time disclose information about you to authorised representatives of this firm and to other professionals, insurance providers, superannuation trustees and product issuers in connection with the purposes detailed above. In the event we consider it necessary to use or disclose information about you for purposes other than those detailed above, or related purposes, we will seek your consent.

You are entitled to obtain access to the information which we hold about you by contacting the firm's Professional Standards Manager.