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Asset Preservation Trusts

A Clear, Honest Guide to What They Can – and Cannot Do

An Asset Preservation Trust (APT) is a legal structure designed to safeguard your most valuable assets — often the family home — for future generations. Used well, an APT can be a genuine and valuable part of family planning. But it's also one of the most over-marketed and frequently mis-sold arrangements in UK estate planning, and it's essential to understand both sides of the picture before going ahead.

This page sets out what an APT really does, where it can help, and where the common claims about it don't stand up to scrutiny.

Why Families Consider An Asset Preservation Trust

People typically set up an APT to provide their family with clearer structure and continuity after they are gone:

  • Succession Planning: Ensuring assets pass to chosen beneficiaries such as children or grandchildren, often more directly than through a will alone.

  • Protection From "Sideways Disinheritance": Safeguarding an inheritance for children if a surviving spouse later remarries and their wealth follows a new family.

  • Continuity for Younger or Vulnerable Beneficiaries: Providing a managed framework rather than handing assets over outright.

  • Reducing Some of the Burden of Probate: Because the trust, not the individual, owns the assets, certain probate delays and costs may be reduced.

These benefits are real, but they only matter if they match your actual needs, which is why honest, regulated advice up front is so important.

FAQs: Asset Preservation Trusts

The "Care Fees" Controversy - What You Really Need to Know

Asset Preservation Trusts are often marketed as a guaranteed way to protect the family home from care fees. This is the single most important issue to understand clearly — because the marketing routinely overstates what the law actually allows.

  • Deliberate Deprivation of Assets: If a local authority believes the main reason for transferring assets into trust is to avoid paying for future care, it can treat you as still owning those assets when assessing what you can afford to contribute. The trust, in effect, achieves nothing.

  • No "Seven-Year Rule" Here: Unlike inheritance tax, there is no time limit on how far back a local authority can look. They can examine your intent behind the transfer indefinitely, regardless of when the trust was created.

  • Marketing Claims Don't Override the Law: Whatever an unregulated provider may suggest, no trust can guarantee protection from care fees if the deprivation test catches it.

This doesn't mean APTs are without value. It does mean that "protection from care fees" should rarely be the primary reason for setting one up – and any provider who tells you otherwise is overselling. Our approach is straightforward: we'll tell you honestly when a trust genuinely helps and equally honestly when it doesn't.

The Real Risks to Weigh Up

Setting up an APT is a major decision with consequences that are difficult to reverse. Before going ahead, you should understand:

  • Loss of Legal Ownership: Once assets are in the trust, you no longer own them — the trustees do. You need to be genuinely comfortable with that change.

  • Possible Tax Charges: Transferring property into a trust can trigger a 20% inheritance tax charge on any amount above your available nil-rate band (currently £325,000 per individual, reduced by any chargeable gifts made in the previous seven years). It may also have implications for capital gains tax and stamp duty land tax.

  • Loss of the Residence Nil-Rate Band: Where a property is held in trust rather than passing directly to direct descendants on death, the additional residence nil-rate band may be lost — which can significantly increase the overall IHT bill.

  • Ongoing Administration: Trusts require active management throughout their life, including trustee meetings, record-keeping, tax filings, and periodic review.

  • The Provider Matters: Many of the worst problems we see come not from trusts themselves but from trusts set up by unregulated firms that later disappear — leaving families to untangle the damage alone.

Is An Asset Preservation Trust Right for You?

There's no universal answer — and you should treat any firm offering a one-size-fits-all APT with real caution. Before proceeding, it's worth asking honestly:

  • What is my Actual Primary Goal - succession planning, probate management, or something else?

  • Have I genuinely understood the tax and ownership consequences of moving my home into trust?

  • Am I confident in my trustees and the firm setting this up to manage things properly for the rest of my life and beyond?

  • Could simpler arrangements — a properly drafted will, perhaps with a trust written into it — achieve the same goal more safely?

The honest answer for many families is that a will-based trust, drafted thoughtfully, achieves much of what an APT promises with fewer risks. For others, an APT genuinely does fit. The only way to know is to take careful, regulated advice tailored to your circumstances.

Get Advice You Can Trust

If you've been approached about an Asset Preservation Trust — or you're considering one — we'd be glad to give you a clear, honest assessment of whether it's right for you, and what the realistic alternatives look like.

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