
The cost of creating a family trust usually includes two types of expenses: government charges and professional charges.
Government charges may include stamp duty, registration fees, notarisation, and execution-related costs. Professional charges may include lawyer fees, CA fees, estate planning advisory, tax review, and trust deed drafting.
A trust registration cost guide mentions common cost heads such as stamp duty, registration fees, notarisation charges, and professional consultation fees. Some guides mention broad indicative ranges such as registration fees around ₹500 to ₹5,000 and notarisation charges around ₹100 to ₹500, but these should not be treated as fixed national rates.
The total cost usually depends on:
A family trust cost is not one single fee. It is made up of multiple cost components. Some are one-time setup costs, while some may continue after the trust is created.
| Cost Component | What It Covers | Cost Depends On |
| Trust deed drafting | Drafting the legal document that creates the family trust | Complexity of family structure, assets, and clauses |
| Stamp duty | Duty payable on the trust deed | State law, asset type, and value of trust property |
| Registration fee | Fee paid at the Sub-Registrar office | State registration rules |
| Notarisation / execution charges | Notary, witnesses, affidavits, printouts, and document execution | Local process and documentation support |
| Professional fee | Lawyer, CA, or estate planner charges | Complexity of trust and advisory required |
| Property transfer cost | Applies when immovable property is transferred into the trust | Market value, state duty, and nature of transfer |
| PAN and bank setup | PAN application and trust bank account opening | Usually low, but service support may add cost |
| Accounting and tax filing | Books, records, ITR filing, and compliance | Trust income, assets, and transaction volume |
Stamp duty is usually the biggest variable. A simple trust deed with only cash or movable assets may have lower duty exposure. A deed transferring immovable property may attract higher duty depending on state law and property value.
Stamp duty and registration charges are the most important cost points while creating a family trust in India.
Stamp duty is not uniform across India. It varies from state to state and may depend on whether the trust deed only records a small money contribution or transfers immovable property into the trust.
In many cases, if only movable assets are settled into the trust, the stamp duty may be lower. But if land, house, flat, or commercial property is transferred into the trust, stamp duty may be calculated based on the property value or nature of transfer.
Before creating a family trust, families should check:
Under-stamping can delay registration and may create future issues when the deed is used for bank, property, tax, or legal purposes.
Legal and professional fees depend on how simple or complex the family trust is.
A basic family trust deed with limited movable assets may cost less. But a trust involving real estate, multiple beneficiaries, business shares, NRI family members, minor beneficiaries, or discretionary distribution rules needs more careful drafting.
Professional fees may include:
Some competitor guides mention that a lawyer or CA may charge around ₹7,000 to ₹15,000 for drafting a functional trust deed. However, the actual fee can be higher if the family trust is complex.
The lowest-cost deed is not always the safest option. If trustee powers, beneficiary rights, asset details, or distribution rules are unclear, the family may face tax issues, property disputes, or difficulty in managing the trust later.
Creating the trust is only the first cost. If the trust holds income-generating assets, property, investments, or business interests, there may be ongoing costs.
These costs may include:
For a simple family trust with no major income, annual costs may be limited. For a trust holding rental property, investments, or business shares, accounting and tax filing costs should be planned from the beginning.
The actual cost of creating a family trust depends on the family’s assets and structure. The table below gives a practical view of how cost may vary in different situations.
| Scenario | Likely Cost Level | Why |
| Simple family trust with cash or movable assets | Lower | Lower stamp duty exposure and simpler deed |
| Trust with residential property | Higher | Stamp duty and registration may depend on property value |
| Trust with commercial property | Higher | Property valuation and transfer duty may increase cost |
| Trust with multiple beneficiaries | Medium to high | Needs clearer distribution and trustee clauses |
| Trust with business shares or investments | Medium to high | Requires legal and tax review |
| Trust involving NRIs | Higher | May need FEMA, tax, and cross-border advice |
| Complex trust with long-term asset control | Higher | Needs detailed drafting and ongoing compliance planning |
This table should not be read as a fixed quotation. The final cost must be calculated after checking the state stamp duty, registration requirement, asset value, and drafting complexity.
The cost of creating a family trust is worth it only when the trust solves a real family or asset-management problem.
A family trust may be useful when:
For a simple family with limited assets and adult beneficiaries, a clear will may be enough. But where the family has complex assets, dependent beneficiaries, or long-term succession concerns, the cost of a family trust may be justified.
The decision should not be based only on setup cost. It should be based on whether the trust gives better control, clarity, and continuity for family assets.
WillJini helps families understand and prepare estate planning documents, private family trust documentation, trust deed clauses, trustee powers, beneficiary clauses, and succession planning paperwork.
A family trust works only when the deed is clear, properly stamped, validly registered where required, and aligned with the family’s asset plan. WillJini helps families structure the documentation so the cost is spent on correct drafting, proper legal clarity, and smoother implementation.
There is no fixed cost. It depends on stamp duty, registration fee, asset value, professional drafting fee, and whether immovable property is transferred into the trust.
Stamp duty is usually the biggest variable, especially if land, house, flat, or commercial property is transferred into the trust.
No. Registration fee and stamp duty vary from state to state. The applicable amount should be checked with the local Sub-Registrar office or state registration portal.
Usually, a simple trust with cash or movable assets may cost less than a trust involving immovable property. But professional drafting and compliance costs can still apply.
Yes, if the trust earns income or holds active assets. Recurring costs may include accounting, tax filing, audit where applicable, property maintenance, and professional advisory.
Yes. WillJini can help families understand the documentation, drafting, trustee clauses, beneficiary clauses, and registration-related requirements before creating a family trust.
A poorly drafted trust deed can create disputes, unclear trustee powers, tax issues, and difficulty in transferring assets. For a family trust, correct drafting is more important than only reducing setup cost.