- If you are not a resident of NSW and your estate is likely to be challenged when you die, do you need to keep your SMSF member benefits on your death from being part of your estate?
- If you are a single director and shareholder of the corporate trustee of the SMSF, ensure that operational and management decisions of the SMSF company trustee can continue to be made between the date of your death and before a grant of probate (for example, sell assets of the SMSF such as listed securities or land) - THIS CAN BE VERY IMPORTANT
- Ensure control of your SMSF is left in the hands of people you trust when you do not have that trust in the other members of the SMSF
- Manage who controls the SMSF after your death if the members of the SMSF are other than you and your spouse
- Provide for the ongoing control of your SMSF if you and your spouse are the only members, and you do not trust your spouse to control and manage the SMSF how you would like after your death
- Provide for who controls your SMSF when you and your spouse are not resident in Australia and when you left Australia, you intended to be absent from Australia for more than 2 years
- Be bound to pay your SMSF member benefits on your death to a nominated person allowed by our superannuation laws, being your surviving spouse, your child or person with whom you are in an interdependency relationship
- Be bound to pay your SMSF member benefits on your death to your estate so it can then be gifted under your will to someone other than those permitted by our superannuation laws, being your surviving spouse, your child or person with whom you are in an interdependency relationship
- Ensure that your direction to the SMSF, about your pension reverting when you die to your spouse (or your children or someone with who you are in an interdependency relationship), is binding on the SMSF
- Ensure that the right to receive your SMSF pension benefits passes to your surviving spouse without your surviving spouse being able to cash all of the pension benefits before they die
- Pay your SMSF member benefits on your death in a tax effective way and your will to otherwise allow for what you want to happen with your assets when you die
- Provide a safety mechanism in your will for what happens if your SMSF member benefits are not paid as you planned
- If you have not made and do not want to make a binding death benefit nomination, allow your surviving spouse to pay all of your SMSF member benefits to themselves without being subject to challenge by your children
- Update its trust deed to ensure maximum flexibility in complying with the taxation and superannuation laws
- Change its trustee
- Comply with the superannuation laws about putting in place or updating an investment strategy
- Comply with the superannuation laws about borrowing money to purchase an asset
- Comply with the superannuation laws about leasing any of its business real property to a related party
- Comply with the superannuation laws about purchasing business real property from a related party including without paying market rates of stamp duty
- Comply with the taxation and superannuation laws when a party with whom the SMSF is making an investment or transacting, in some way, is not dealing with the SMSF at arm's length