Protecting your family’s wealth during a divorce is one of the most common concerns we hear from homeowners and business owners across England and Wales. With the UK divorce rate sitting at around 42%, it’s a risk that affects nearly half of all married couples — and without proper planning, a lifetime of hard work can be split in ways you never intended.
An asset protection trust — specifically, a properly structured discretionary lifetime trust — can be one of the most effective ways to safeguard your assets. By placing your assets into a trust well before any marital difficulties arise, you can ensure they are managed and distributed according to your wishes, even in the event of a divorce. As Mike Pugh often puts it: “What house? I don’t own a house.” That’s the power of a trust — assets held by trustees are no longer personally yours to divide.
Key Takeaways
- A discretionary trust can help safeguard your family home, business assets, and savings from being divided in divorce proceedings.
- Assets held in trust are legally owned by the trustees — not by you personally — which means they sit outside your personal estate.
- Timing is everything: trusts must be established well in advance of any marital difficulties to be effective.
- An asset protection trust should form part of a broader estate plan that also addresses inheritance tax, care fees, and probate delays.
- Specialist legal advice is essential — the law around trusts and divorce is nuanced, and a general high-street solicitor may not have the expertise required.
Understanding Asset Protection Trusts
When it comes to protecting your assets from divorce, understanding how asset protection trusts work under English and Welsh law is essential. England invented trust law over 800 years ago, and the legal distinction between legal ownership and beneficial ownership remains one of the most powerful asset protection mechanisms available anywhere in the world.
What is an Asset Protection Trust?
An asset protection trust is a legal arrangement in which a settlor (the person creating the trust) transfers assets to trustees, who then hold and manage those assets for the benefit of named beneficiaries. Crucially, a trust is not a legal entity — it has no separate legal personality. Instead, the trustees become the legal owners of the assets, while the beneficiaries hold the beneficial interest. This separation of ownership is what provides the protection: once assets are properly transferred into trust, they are no longer part of the settlor’s personal estate and cannot simply be divided in divorce proceedings as if they were the settlor’s own property.
Types of Asset Protection Trusts
Under English and Welsh law, the primary classification of trusts is whether they take effect during your lifetime (lifetime trusts) or on your death (will trusts). Within lifetime trusts, the most important types for asset protection are:
- Discretionary trusts — by far the most effective for divorce protection. Trustees have absolute discretion over who receives what, and when. No beneficiary has any automatic right to income or capital, which makes it extremely difficult for a divorcing spouse to claim against the trust assets. These trusts can last up to 125 years under the Perpetuities and Accumulations Act 2009.
- Interest in possession trusts — a named beneficiary (the life tenant) has a right to income or use of the trust property. These offer less protection in divorce because the income interest can be more easily identified and valued by the court.
- Bare trusts — the beneficiary has an absolute right to both capital and income once they reach 18. These provide virtually no divorce protection because the beneficiary can collapse the trust at any time under the rule in Saunders v Vautier.
For asset protection purposes, a discretionary lifetime trust is almost always the right choice. Around 98–99% of the trusts Mike Pugh establishes are discretionary for precisely this reason. You can find more information on trusts, including the Family Home Protection Trust in the UK, which is specifically designed for homeowners.
How They Work
The operation of an asset protection trust involves several key steps. First, the settlor transfers assets into the trust — for property, this means either a TR1 transfer of legal title (if there is no mortgage) or a Declaration of Trust transferring the beneficial interest (if a mortgage remains in place, because the lender’s consent would be needed for a full transfer of legal title). The trust deed sets out the trustees’ powers, the class of beneficiaries, and the rules governing the trust. A Form RX1 restriction is registered at Land Registry to protect the trust’s interest.
From that point forward, the trustees — not the settlor — are the legal owners. The settlor can also be a trustee, which means they retain day-to-day involvement and control. Because no single beneficiary of a discretionary trust has any right to the assets, there is nothing for a divorcing spouse to claim as “theirs.” The trust must also be irrevocable — a revocable trust provides no meaningful protection because HMRC and the courts will treat the assets as still belonging to the settlor.
Benefits of Asset Protection Trusts in Divorce
When it comes to divorce, protecting your assets is crucial, and a properly structured discretionary trust is one of the most effective tools available under English and Welsh law. With around 42% of UK marriages ending in divorce, this isn’t an unlikely scenario — it’s a realistic risk that responsible planning should address.
Safeguarding Your Wealth
Asset protection trusts safeguard your wealth by legally separating trust assets from your personal estate. Once assets are held by trustees, they are no longer “yours” in the eyes of the law. In a discretionary trust, no beneficiary — including a divorcing spouse — has any automatic entitlement to the trust assets. This is fundamentally different from assets held in your own name, which are fully exposed to division during divorce proceedings.
Consider a practical example: you own a family home worth £400,000 and place it into a discretionary trust. If your adult child later divorces, their ex-spouse cannot claim a share of that property because your child never legally owned it. The trustees hold the legal title, and the trust deed gives the trustees — not your child — the power to decide how the property is used. As Mike Pugh puts it: “What house? I don’t own a house.”

Minimising Legal Disputes
One of the significant benefits of asset protection trusts is their ability to minimise legal disputes during divorce proceedings. When assets are clearly held in a properly constituted trust — with a trust deed, registered trustees, and a clear paper trail — there is far less room for argument about what belongs to whom. The trust assets are simply not part of the matrimonial pot in the same way that personally held assets are.
This clarity can reduce both the cost and the emotional strain of divorce proceedings. Instead of lengthy disputes over who contributed what to the family wealth, the trust structure provides a definitive answer: the trust owns the assets, and the trustees — guided by the trust deed and any letter of wishes — decide how they are used. For more information on how trusts interact with divorce, you can visit Osborne’s Law Blog, which provides valuable insights into the legal aspects of trusts and divorce.
| Benefits | Description |
|---|---|
| Safeguarding Wealth | Trust assets are legally owned by trustees, not by you personally — keeping them outside the matrimonial pot |
| Minimising Legal Disputes | Clear trust structure reduces scope for costly arguments about asset ownership |
| Preserving Family Inheritance | Discretionary trusts ensure assets pass to your chosen beneficiaries, not to an ex-spouse |
Preserving Family Inheritance
Asset protection trusts are one of the most effective means of preserving family inheritance across generations. The risk of “sideways disinheritance” — where assets you intended for your children end up with their ex-spouse — is real and surprisingly common. By placing assets in a discretionary trust, you ensure that the trustees control distribution. Even if your child divorces, the trust assets remain intact and protected for your grandchildren and future generations.
This is particularly important for inherited wealth, family businesses, or the family home. Without a trust, these assets are vulnerable every time a beneficiary marries and subsequently divorces. With a trust, the assets are held securely, managed by trustees who are legally bound to act in the best interests of all beneficiaries as a class. A discretionary trust can last up to 125 years, providing protection across multiple generations. Not losing the family money provides the greatest peace of mind above all else.
The Legal Framework in the UK
Navigating the legal framework is essential for establishing effective asset protection trusts in England and Wales. The legal landscape governing these trusts has developed over 800 years and provides a robust foundation for protecting your assets.
Key Legislation Governing Asset Protection
Several pieces of legislation are relevant to asset protection trusts in England and Wales. The Trustee Act 2000 sets out the duties and powers of trustees, including their duty of care and investment powers. The Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996 governs how trusts holding land operate and how trustees can be appointed or removed. The Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 is also critical, as it gives the family court broad discretion to consider trust assets when making financial orders on divorce — which is precisely why the type of trust matters so much. Additionally, the impact of divorce on estate plans is a crucial consideration when structuring your trust.
The Perpetuities and Accumulations Act 2009 allows trusts in England and Wales to last up to 125 years, giving families long-term protection across multiple generations. All UK express trusts — including bare trusts — must also be registered with HMRC’s Trust Registration Service (TRS) within 90 days of creation, as required under the 5th Money Laundering Directive. Importantly, unlike Companies House, the TRS register is not publicly accessible, providing an additional layer of privacy for families using trusts.
Differences Between England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland
While England and Wales share a single legal system for trust law purposes, Scotland and Northern Ireland each have their own distinct frameworks. Scotland’s trust law operates under a fundamentally different legal tradition (Scots law), and the Trusts (Scotland) Act 2016 introduced significant reforms. In Scotland, a beneficiary of a bare trust can collapse it at age 16 rather than 18. Northern Ireland has its own legislation, including the Trustee Act (Northern Ireland) 1958. MP Estate Planning specialises in English and Welsh law, so if you have assets in Scotland or Northern Ireland, additional specialist advice may be needed.
| Region | Key Legislation | Trust Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| England and Wales | Trustee Act 2000, Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996, Perpetuities and Accumulations Act 2009 | Trusts can last up to 125 years, robust discretionary trust framework, trustees hold legal title |
| Scotland | Trusts (Scotland) Act 2016 | Separate legal tradition, different rules on trustee powers and beneficiary rights |
| Northern Ireland | Trustee Act (Northern Ireland) 1958 | Broadly similar to England and Wales but with some distinct provisions |
Legal Precedents and Case Studies
Several landmark cases have shaped how courts in England and Wales treat trusts during divorce proceedings. In Charman v Charman [2007], the Court of Appeal confirmed that while trusts are not automatically part of the matrimonial pot, the court retains discretion to consider trust assets — particularly where a spouse has effective control over the trust. This is why the structure of the trust matters enormously: a properly constituted discretionary trust where no single beneficiary has control or entitlement provides far stronger protection than a bare trust or a trust where the settlor retains excessive control.
The key principle from the case law is this: the more genuinely discretionary the trust, and the earlier it was established (ideally well before any marital difficulties), the harder it is for the court to treat the trust assets as available resources. This is why specialist advice is essential — as Mike Pugh says: “The law — like medicine — is broad. You wouldn’t want your GP doing surgery.”
How to Establish an Asset Protection Trust
When it comes to protecting your assets from divorce, setting up the right type of trust — well in advance — is essential. The process requires specialist knowledge, but it is far more straightforward than most people assume. Here’s what’s involved.
Choosing a Trust Structure
The first step in establishing an asset protection trust is choosing the right trust structure. Under English and Welsh law, the primary classification is whether the trust takes effect during your lifetime (a lifetime trust) or on your death (a will trust). Within lifetime trusts, the key types are:
- Discretionary Trusts: The gold standard for asset protection. Trustees have absolute discretion over distributions — no beneficiary has any right to income or capital. This makes it extremely difficult for a divorcing spouse (or their solicitor) to argue that the trust assets should be divided. Around 98–99% of the trusts Mike Pugh establishes are discretionary for this reason.
- Interest in Possession Trusts: A named beneficiary (the life tenant) has a right to income or use of the trust property. These are more commonly used in will trusts (e.g., to give a surviving spouse the right to live in the family home while preserving capital for children). They offer less divorce protection because the income interest is identifiable and can be valued.
- Bare Trusts: The beneficiary has an absolute right to capital and income at age 18. These provide virtually no protection against divorce, care fees, or any other threat. Once the beneficiary reaches 18, they can collapse the trust entirely under the rule in Saunders v Vautier.
For divorce protection, a discretionary lifetime trust is almost always the correct choice. It must be irrevocable — a revocable trust provides no meaningful protection because HMRC (and the courts) will treat the assets as still belonging to the settlor. Mike’s trust structures use irrevocable trusts with “Standard and Overriding powers” — these give trustees certain defined powers and flexibility without making the trust revocable.
Selecting the Right Trustee
Choosing the right trustees is crucial to the success of your asset protection trust. You need a minimum of two trustees (and Land Registry allows up to four trustees on a property title). You can appoint:
- Individual Trustees: Trusted family members or friends. The settlor can also be a trustee, which allows them to retain involvement and oversight — a key feature of Mike’s trust structures.
- Professional Trustees: Solicitors or other professionals with expertise in trust administration.
- Corporate Trustees: Trust companies that provide ongoing trust management services.
The trust deed should include a clear process for removing and replacing trustees, ensuring the trust remains well-managed over its lifetime. A letter of wishes can provide guidance to trustees on how the settlor would like the trust to be administered — though it is not legally binding, it carries significant moral weight and is taken seriously by trustees.
Required Documentation and Costs
Establishing an asset protection trust requires specific documentation, including:
- Trust Deed: The founding legal document that sets out the terms of the trust, the trustee powers, and the class of beneficiaries.
- TR1 Form: If transferring property with no mortgage — this transfers legal title to the trustees at Land Registry.
- Declaration of Trust: If property has a mortgage — this transfers the beneficial interest to the trust while legal title remains with the mortgagor (because the lender’s consent would be needed for a full transfer). Over time, as the mortgage balance decreases and the property value increases, the growth happens inside the trust.
- Form RX1: To register a restriction on the property title at Land Registry, protecting the trust’s interest.
- TRS Registration: All UK express trusts must be registered with HMRC’s Trust Registration Service within 90 days of creation.
The costs of establishing an asset protection trust are far more reasonable than most people expect. At MP Estate Planning, straightforward trusts start from £850, with most falling in the range of £850 to £2,000 depending on complexity. When you compare that to the potential cost of losing half your assets in a divorce — or paying care fees of £1,200 to £1,500 per week — a trust is one of the most cost-effective forms of protection available. Mike is the first and only company in the UK that actively publishes all prices on YouTube, so there are no hidden surprises.
Asset Protection Trusts vs. Other Strategies
In the realm of asset protection, several strategies can be employed to secure your wealth. Asset protection trusts are one such method, but how do they compare to other available options? Let’s examine the key differences.
Comparing with Prenuptial Agreements
Prenuptial agreements and asset protection trusts can both help protect assets in the event of a divorce, but they work in fundamentally different ways. A prenuptial agreement is a contract between two people planning to marry, setting out how assets should be divided if they divorce. In England and Wales, prenuptial agreements are not automatically legally binding — they carry “decisive weight” following the Supreme Court decision in Radmacher v Granatino [2010], but the court retains ultimate discretion and can depart from a prenup if it considers it unfair.
Key differences include:
- A prenuptial agreement requires the agreement and full financial disclosure of both parties. A discretionary trust can be established by one person (the settlor) without the other spouse’s involvement.
- A prenuptial agreement is a contract that the court may choose to override. A properly constituted discretionary trust transfers legal ownership to the trustees — the assets are genuinely no longer the settlor’s to divide.
- A prenuptial agreement only protects in the specific scenario of divorce. A trust provides ongoing protection against divorce, care fees, creditors, inheritance tax, and probate delays — all in one structure.
For more information on estate planning and asset protection, you can visit MP Estate Planning.
Trusts vs. Limited Companies
Both trusts and limited companies can be used for asset protection, but they have fundamentally different structures and implications. A limited company is a separate legal entity that can own assets and incur liabilities, with its own registration at Companies House (which is publicly accessible). A trust, by contrast, is a legal arrangement — not a legal entity — where trustees hold assets for the benefit of beneficiaries. The Trust Registration Service is not publicly accessible, providing an additional layer of privacy.
| Feature | Asset Protection Trusts | Limited Companies |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Status | Legal arrangement — trustees are the legal owners | Separate legal entity with its own legal personality |
| Privacy | Trust Registration Service is NOT publicly accessible | Companies House register is publicly accessible |
| Control | Trustees manage assets according to trust deed; settlor can also be a trustee | Shareholders and directors control the company |
| Divorce Protection | Strong — discretionary trust assets are not personally owned by any beneficiary | Weaker — company shares owned by a spouse are a personal asset subject to division |
| Tax Treatment | Trust income taxed at 45% (non-dividend) or 39.35% (dividend), with first £1,000 at basic rate. No corporation tax | Subject to corporation tax on profits, then personal tax on dividends extracted |
Inheritance Planning Considerations
When considering asset protection strategies, it’s essential to think about the broader inheritance tax implications. Under current rules, inheritance tax (IHT) is charged at 40% on the taxable estate above the nil rate band (£325,000 per person, frozen since 2009 and confirmed frozen until at least April 2031). The residence nil rate band adds a further £175,000 per person — but only where a qualifying residential interest passes to direct descendants (children, grandchildren, or step-children). For a married couple, the combined maximum allowance is £1,000,000 (£650,000 NRB + £350,000 RNRB). With the average home in England now worth around £290,000, ordinary homeowners are increasingly caught by IHT — this is no longer a “rich people” problem.
A well-structured asset protection trust doesn’t just protect against divorce — it can also bypass probate delays (where sole-name assets can be frozen for months during the process), help with inheritance tax planning, and provide a framework for managing assets if you lose mental capacity. Trust assets bypass probate entirely — trustees can act immediately on the settlor’s death without waiting for a Grant of Probate. As Mike Pugh says: “Trusts are not just for the rich — they’re for the smart.”
Common Misconceptions about Asset Protection
Many individuals harbour misconceptions about asset protection trusts, often viewing them as a tool exclusively for the wealthy or as an impenetrable legal shield. Let’s address the most common myths head-on.
Myth: It’s Only for the Wealthy
This is perhaps the most damaging myth in estate planning. The reality is that trusts are for anyone with assets worth protecting — and in a country where the average home in England is worth around £290,000 and the divorce rate sits at approximately 42%, that includes most homeowners. If you own a property, have savings, or run a business, you have assets that could be at risk in a divorce.
Consider a couple who own a home worth £350,000. Without a trust, that property is part of the matrimonial pot and will likely be divided — potentially forcing a sale. With a properly structured discretionary trust established well in advance, the property is owned by the trustees, not by either spouse. The cost of setting up such a trust — from £850 — is equivalent to roughly one week of care home fees, or a fraction of the legal costs of contesting asset division in a divorce. Trusts are not just for the rich — they’re for the smart.
Myth: It’s a Shield Against All Legal Claims
While discretionary trusts provide strong protection, they are not an impenetrable fortress. Under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, the family court in England and Wales has broad discretion and can, in certain circumstances, consider trust assets as a “resource” available to a spouse — particularly if the trust was established recently, if the settlor retains excessive control, or if the trust appears to have been created specifically to defeat a spouse’s financial claims.
This is why timing and structure are so important. A discretionary trust established years before any marital difficulties, with multiple beneficiaries, genuine trustee discretion, and no excessive control retained by the settlor, is far harder for the court to look behind. A trust hastily created after separation papers are served will almost certainly be challenged successfully.
| Feature | Discretionary Trust | Prenuptial Agreement | Limited Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| Divorce Protection Level | Strong (if established well in advance) | Moderate (not automatically binding in England & Wales) | Weak (shares are a personal asset) |
| Additional Benefits | IHT planning, care fee protection, probate bypass, privacy | Divorce only | Limited liability for business debts |
| Typical Cost | From £850 | £1,000–£3,000+ | Ongoing accounting and filing costs |
Clarifying Estate Planning vs. Asset Protection
There’s often confusion between estate planning and asset protection, but in practice, they work hand in hand. Estate planning focuses on what happens to your assets after you die — who inherits, how inheritance tax is managed, and how the probate process is handled. Asset protection focuses on keeping your assets safe during your lifetime — from divorce, care fees, creditor claims, and other threats.

The good news is that a well-structured discretionary trust addresses both concerns simultaneously. It protects assets during your lifetime (from divorce, care fees, and creditors) while also bypassing probate delays on death and providing a framework for how assets are distributed to future generations. Not losing the family money provides the greatest peace of mind above all else — and a comprehensive trust delivers that protection across every stage of life. Keeping families wealthy strengthens the country as a whole.
The Role of a Specialist in Establishing a Trust
When setting up an asset protection trust, working with the right legal specialist is essential. Trust law is a highly specialised area — as Mike Pugh often says: “The law — like medicine — is broad. You wouldn’t want your GP doing surgery.” The same applies here: a general high-street solicitor may understand wills and probate but lack the specific expertise needed to structure a discretionary trust that will withstand scrutiny from both the family court and HMRC.
Choosing the Right Legal Expert
Selecting the right specialist is crucial for the successful establishment of your asset protection trust. Here are some key considerations:
- Specialisation: Look for a practitioner who specialises specifically in trusts and estate planning — not a general practice solicitor who handles trusts “on the side.”
- Track Record: How many trusts have they established? Do they understand the specific interaction between trust law and divorce law?
- Transparency on Pricing: A reputable trust specialist will be upfront about costs. MP Estate Planning publishes all prices on YouTube — the first and only company in the UK to do so.
- Ongoing Support: Trust administration doesn’t end when the trust deed is signed. Your specialist should offer guidance on TRS registration, trustee changes, and periodic reviews.
Importance of Professional Guidance
Professional guidance is essential for navigating the complexities of trust law and ensuring your trust provides genuine protection. A specialist can advise on:
- Which trust structure is appropriate for your circumstances — a Family Home Protection Trust, Gifted Property Trust, or Settlor Excluded Asset Protection Trust all serve different purposes.
- How to transfer assets correctly — the wrong paperwork or an incomplete transfer can undermine the entire trust.
- Compliance with HMRC requirements, including Trust Registration Service registration within 90 days and ongoing trust tax return obligations (SA900).
- How to structure the trust to maximise protection in the event of divorce — including trustee selection, the class of beneficiaries, and the scope of trustee powers.
Getting this right from the start provides genuine peace of mind that your assets are protected — both now and for future generations.
Understanding Legal Fees
Understanding the costs involved in establishing an asset protection trust is important, and the good news is that it’s far more affordable than most people expect. Straightforward trusts at MP Estate Planning start from £850, with most falling in the range of £850 to £2,000 depending on complexity. More complex situations involving multiple properties or advanced tax planning may cost more.
To put this in perspective: average care home fees in England run at £1,200 to £1,500 per week. A trust costs the equivalent of one to two weeks of care — a one-time fee versus an ongoing cost that can drain an entire estate down to the £14,250 threshold. When you compare the cost of a trust to the potential costs of losing half your assets in a divorce or paying years of care fees, it’s one of the most cost-effective forms of protection available.
Limitations of Asset Protection Trusts
While asset protection trusts are a powerful tool for safeguarding your assets, they are not without limitations. Understanding these limitations is essential for making informed decisions and setting realistic expectations.
Situations Where They May Fail
Asset protection trusts can fail to provide the desired protection in several specific situations. The most common reasons are:
- Timing: If the trust is established too close to the date of separation or divorce, the court is far more likely to look behind it. A trust created years before any marital difficulties is much harder to challenge than one established when the relationship is already deteriorating.
- Excessive control: If the settlor retains too much control — for example, being the sole trustee with power to appoint all trust assets to themselves — the court may treat the assets as effectively belonging to the settlor.
- Wrong trust type: A bare trust provides virtually no protection because the beneficiary has an absolute right to the assets at age 18. Only a discretionary trust provides robust divorce protection.
- Incomplete transfers: If assets are not properly transferred into the trust (e.g., the property title is not updated at Land Registry, or the Form RX1 restriction is not registered), the trust may not be effective.
The Risk of Sham Trusts and Fraudulent Transfers
One of the most significant risks is the court determining that the trust is a “sham” — meaning it was never intended to operate as a genuine trust, but was merely a device to put assets beyond the reach of a spouse or creditor. If the court finds that the trust was established with the deliberate intention of defeating a spouse’s financial claims, or that the trustees never exercised genuine independent discretion, the trust can be set aside.
Key warning signs that courts look for include: the trust was created very shortly before or during divorce proceedings; the settlor continued to treat the assets as their own; there was no genuine change in how the assets were managed; or the trust deed gives the settlor unfettered power to direct the trustees. This is why Mike’s trust structures are built with genuine discretion and proper trustee governance from day one.
Court’s Power to Set Aside Trusts
Under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, the family court in England and Wales has broad powers to vary ante-nuptial and post-nuptial settlements, and to consider trust assets as a “resource” available to a spouse. However, the court’s ability to interfere with a trust depends heavily on the trust’s structure and the circumstances of its creation.
A properly constituted discretionary trust, established well in advance of any marital difficulties, with multiple beneficiaries and genuine trustee discretion, is far harder for the court to set aside. The case law — including Charman v Charman and Whaley v Whaley — demonstrates that courts will respect the independence of a properly structured trust, even in high-value divorce cases. The key is to plan early and plan properly. As Mike Pugh puts it: “Plan, don’t panic.”
Case Studies: Successful Asset Protection in Divorce
When it comes to divorce, protecting your assets requires planning — and the earlier that planning starts, the stronger the protection. Here are some examples that illustrate how asset protection trusts work in practice under English and Welsh law.
Examples of Effective Trust Use
In one scenario, a business owner placed his company shares and key business assets into a discretionary trust several years before his marriage. When the marriage later broke down, the trust assets were held by the trustees with no single beneficiary having any entitlement. The family court acknowledged that the trust was a genuine, long-established arrangement and declined to treat the business assets as part of the matrimonial pot. The business remained intact, and the owner could continue operating without disruption.
In another example, parents placed the family home into a Family Home Protection Trust while their adult children were still in stable relationships. When one child later divorced, the ex-spouse’s solicitor attempted to claim a share of the property. However, because the property was held by the trustees of a discretionary trust — and had been for several years before the marriage even took place — there was no personal ownership for the ex-spouse to claim against. The family home was preserved for the next generation.
Lessons Learned from Real Life Scenarios
These scenarios highlight several key lessons for anyone considering an asset protection trust:
- Timing is everything: The trust must be established well before any marital difficulties arise. A trust created after separation is almost certainly too late.
- Structure matters: Only a discretionary trust provides robust divorce protection. Bare trusts and interest in possession trusts are far easier for the court to look behind.
- Genuine independence: The trustees must exercise real discretion. A trust where the settlor directs every decision is vulnerable to being treated as a sham.
- Professional advice is essential: Working with a specialist who understands the interaction between trust law and family law ensures the trust is structured to withstand scrutiny.
The consistent message from the case law is clear: courts in England and Wales will respect a properly constituted discretionary trust that was established for legitimate reasons and well in advance of any dispute. Proactive planning is the key — not reactive scrambling when a relationship breaks down.
Moving Forward: Steps to Protect Your Assets
Protecting your assets from potential divorce settlements requires a proactive approach — and the best time to start planning is right now, while everything is stable. As Mike Pugh says: “Plan, don’t panic.” Here are the practical steps to take.
Creating a Comprehensive Plan
Developing a comprehensive plan means looking at your entire estate — your home, savings, investments, business interests, and pensions — and identifying which assets are most at risk. A 13-point threat analysis (such as the one provided by MP Estate Planning’s Estate Pro AI software) can identify vulnerabilities you may not have considered: not just divorce, but also inheritance tax, care fees, probate delays, creditor claims, and loss of mental capacity. The right plan addresses all of these threats simultaneously through a combination of discretionary trusts, Lasting Powers of Attorney (LPAs), and a properly drafted will.
Regular Reviews and Updates
Establishing a trust is not a “set it and forget it” exercise. You should review your trust arrangements every three to five years, or whenever there is a significant life event — marriage, divorce, birth of a child or grandchild, purchase of a new property, or a change in the law. Trustee appointments may need updating, the letter of wishes may need revising, and new assets may need to be brought into the trust. Regular reviews ensure your protection remains current and effective.
Expert Guidance
Engaging with a specialist who understands both trust law and family law is essential. A general solicitor who handles conveyancing or criminal law is unlikely to have the depth of knowledge needed to structure a trust that will withstand scrutiny from the family court. At MP Estate Planning, we focus exclusively on trusts, wills, and estate planning — because keeping families wealthy strengthens the country as a whole. If you’re ready to take the first step, a free consultation can help you understand exactly what protection you need and what it will cost.
