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Special Disability Trusts

Established by parents and immediate family members to plan for the future care and accommodation needs of a person with a severe disability.

Special Disability Trusts

This initiative helps immediate family members of people with severe disabilities make a private financial provision, through a Special Disability Trust, for their future care and accommodation needs.

Learn more by visiting the Special Disability Trusts page.

The benefits of a Special Disability Trust are:

  • that a gifting concession of up to $500,000 combined is available for eligible family members of the principal beneficiary and
  • that an assets test assessment exemption of up to $596,500 (indexed each year) is available to the principal beneficiary

To be eligible to be a principal beneficiary, the disabled person must meet the definition of severe disability.

We recommend that you consult a financial adviser or solicitor for advice before establishing a Special Disability Trust.

To find out more about Special Disability Trusts contact Department of Human Services' Special Disability Trust Team by: 

  • phoning 1800 734 750, for the cost of a local call except from mobile and pay phones, or 
  • emailing Department of Human Service's Special Disability Trust Team

You need to know

Characteristics of a Special Disability Trust

A Special Disability Trust must:

  • have only one principal beneficiary (the person for whom the trust is established), who must meet the eligibility criteria
  • provide for the accommodation and care needs of the principal beneficiary
  • have a trust deed that contains the clauses as set out in the model trust deed
  • have an independent trustee, or alternatively have more than one trustee
  • comply with the investment restrictions
  • provide annual financial statements and
  • conduct independent audits when required

The principal beneficiary and Special Disability Trusts

To be eligible to be a principal beneficiary, the person with a disability must meet the definition of severe disability.

Read more about principal beneficiaries

Eligibility for the gifting concession and Special Disability Trusts

Immediate family members of the principal beneficiary who are of age or of service-pension age or more and are receiving a pension (for example, Age Pension or Carer Payment) are eligible for the gifting concession.

If there is more than one contributor to the trust, the combined concession first applies to those eligible family members who are receiving a pension after reaching age or service pension age.

Immediate family members

Immediate family members include:

  • natural parents
  • legal guardians (as defined)
  • adoptive parents
  • step parents
  • grandparents
  • siblings

Note: The term legal guardian used in the definition of parent or immediate family member includes a person who is, or was, the legal guardian of the person with a severe disability while that person was aged under 18. The term sibling refers to a brother, sister, half-brother, half-sister, adoptive brother, adoptive sister, step-brother or step-sister.

Fund contributions and Special Disability Trusts

Contributions or gifts of assets to any value can be made to this type of trust at any time by almost anyone.

The rate of a contributor’s Centrelink payment may be affected if the contribution is worth more than the allowable concessional amount or if the contributor does not meet the required eligibility criteria.

Gifts can affect Centrelink payments because they directly or indirectly reduce the assets available for personal use. Contributors must tell us about any gifts or transfers within 14 days of when they have occurred.

Any gift or number of gifts whose total value is greater than the allowable concessional amount will be assessed under normal gifting rules.

Read more about disposing of assets or making a gift.

Gifting concessions and Special Disability Trusts

A gifting concession of up to $500,000 combined is available for eligible family members of the principal beneficiary.

This concessional amount can only be used once. For example, if an eligible contributor gifts to a Special Disability Trust and receives a concession and then dies, his or her concession amount cannot be accessed by any other immediate family member.

Using Special Disability Trust funds

The funds are intended to meet the reasonable care and accommodation needs of the principal beneficiary.

The trustee is able to:

  • pay for the beneficiary’s dental and medical expenses, including membership costs for private health funds
  • pay the maintenance expenses of the trust-property assets
  • spend up to $10,250 in a financial year on discretionary items not related to the care and accommodation needs of the beneficiary. (This expenditure should remain compliant with the legislative requirements of a Special Disability Trust).

Tax concessions for Special Disability Trusts

A Special Disability Trust’s unexpected income is taxed at the beneficiary’s personal income tax rate(s), rather than at the highest marginal tax rate.

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