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What Are The Different Types of Trusts in India? Explained

If you have ever wondered how families protect wealth across generations, how a temple or hospital is legally run, or how an NGO earns tax exemption, the answer in each case is often the same: a trust. A trust is one of the oldest and most flexible legal tools in India, but "trust" is not a single thing — it is a family of structures, each built for a different purpose. This guide walks through what a trust actually is and the main types you will come across in India.
Types of Trusts in India

What Is a Trust?

A trust is a legal arrangement involving three parties. The settlor (also called the author) transfers property to a trustee, who holds and manages it for the benefit of a beneficiary. The terms what the property is, who benefits, and how it is managed — are set out in a written document called the trust deed.

Private trusts in India are governed by the Indian Trusts Act, 1882, the foundational law that defines trusts, the duties of trustees, and the rights of beneficiaries. Importantly, that Act covers private trusts only. Public, religious, and charitable trusts fall outside it and are governed by separate state laws and tax statutes instead.

A simple way to picture it: a grandfather transfers a property to a trusted relative, who manages it until his minor grand daughter is old enough to receive it. The grandfather is the settlor, the relative is the trustee, and the grand daughter is the beneficiary. That arrangement is a trust.

Why Trusts Are Used

People and organisations set up trusts for a few clear reasons:

  • Protecting and managing assets — keeping property safe and professionally managed, especially for those who cannot manage it themselves.
  • Succession and estate planning — passing wealth to the next generation smoothly, often avoiding the delays of probate.
  • Providing for dependents — securing the future of minor children or family members with special needs.
  • Privacy — unlike a will that may become public during probate, a trust generally keeps arrangements confidential.
  • Charitable giving — channelling money into education, healthcare, or relief work, often with tax benefits.
  • Lawful tax planning — structuring assets efficiently within the limits of the law.

Types of Trusts in India

Trusts are classified along a few different lines — by who benefits (public vs private), by how they are created (express vs implied), and by their purpose (such as charitable or special-needs). The six types below cover the categories you are most likely to encounter.

  1. Public Trust — Created for the benefit of the general public or a large section of society, usually for charitable or religious purposes such as running schools, hospitals, or places of worship. Public trusts are governed by state legislation (for example, the Maharashtra Public Trusts Act, 1950), not the Indian Trusts Act. Example: a trust that operates a charitable hospital.
  2. Private Trust — Created for specific, identifiable individuals or a family, and governed by the Indian Trusts Act, 1882. These are the everyday vehicles of family wealth and succession planning. Example: parents setting up a trust to fund a minor child’s education and care.
  3. Special-Purpose (Special Needs) Trust — Set up to achieve one defined objective. The most common and important form in India is the special needs trust, created to provide lifelong financial security for a dependent with a disability, often alongside government benefits. Example: a trust ensuring a differently-abled family member is cared for after the parents are gone.
  4. Charitable Trust — A type of public trust formed for charitable purposes — relief of the poor, education, medical relief, preservation of the environment, and similar causes of general public benefit. Charitable trusts can claim income tax exemption once registered. Example: an NGO running rural education programmes.

2026 update: From 1 April 2026, the new Income-tax Act, 2025 changed how these entities are registered. Charitable and religious trusts are now classified as Registered Non-Profit Organisations (RNPOs) under Section 332, with donor deductions approved separately under Section 354 — replacing the familiar Sections 12A/12AB and 80G of the old Income-tax Act, 1961. Registrations already valid under the old sections continue until they expire, so existing trusts do not need to re-register immediately.

  1. Implied Trust — Not created by an explicit deed, but inferred by law from the conduct or intention of the parties. The circumstances themselves show a trust was intended. Example: where someone holds money or property in a way that clearly indicates it was meant to be used for another person’s benefit.
  2. Express Trust — Deliberately and clearly created, almost always through a written trust deed that names the trustee, the beneficiaries, and the property. Most private and public trusts are express trusts. Example: a registered family trust deed setting out exactly how assets are to be held and distributed.

Benefits of Registering a Trust

Registration of trust gives a trust legal standing and several practical advantages:

  • Legal validity and enforceability – A trust deed that deals with immovable property must be registered under the Registration Act, 1908. For trusts holding only movable assets, registration is optional but strongly advisable, as it creates a clear, hard-to-challenge record.
  • Asset protectionOnce assets are validly transferred to an irrevocable trust, they are generally ring-fenced from later personal or business creditor claims — provided the transfer was genuine and not made to defraud creditors.
  • Tax benefits – Charitable trusts registered as RNPOs enjoy income tax exemption (subject to applying at least 85% of their income to charitable purposes), and their donors can claim deductions. Private trusts, while not tax-free, allow for structured and efficient succession.
  • Smooth succession and fewer disputes – Assets held in a trust pass to beneficiaries without probate, reducing delay, cost, and the risk of family litigation.
  • Credibility – For charitable work, a registered trust can receive donations, grants, and corporate CSR funding that an unregistered body cannot.

Setting Up a Trust: How WillJini Helps

Creating a trust is more than signing a document. The Trust Deed has to be drafted correctly — clearly defining the trustees, the beneficiaries, and the rules of management — because a poorly worded deed can trigger disputes or be rejected when you later claim tax benefits. Where immovable property is involved, registration is also a physical process at the Sub-Registrar’s office, which many people find confusing to navigate on their own.

This is where a structured succession service like WillJini helps. Operating since 2014 with an in-house team of lawyers, it offers end-to-end trust formation: understanding your objectives and assets, deciding the trustees and management rules, drafting a lawyer-reviewed Trust Deed aligned to your family’s needs, and guiding you through registration. It also handles the practical follow-through — obtaining the trust’s PAN, opening its bank account, and transferring assets into it — so the trust is not just created on paper but is actually ready to operate. The value is less about the brand and more about turning a complex legal process into a guided, error-free one.

Conclusion

Trusts in India are not one structure but several, each shaped to a different goal — protecting a family’s wealth, providing for a vulnerable dependent, or advancing a public cause. Choosing the right type starts with being clear about who you want to benefit and why. Because trust law and the tax rules around it are technical — and, with the Income-tax Act, 2025 now in force, recently changed — the structure and the trust deed should always be drawn up with a qualified lawyer or chartered accountant before you commit assets to it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which type of trust is best for a family in India?

For protecting and passing on family wealth, a private family trust under the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 is the usual choice. It lets you manage assets during your lifetime and continue after, with clear rules for trustees and beneficiaries.

Is it mandatory to register a trust in India?

Registration is mandatory only when the trust holds immovable property, under the Registration Act, 1908. For movable assets it is optional, but registering still gives stronger legal proof and reduces the chance of disputes.

How many trustees are needed to create a trust?

A private trust can be formed with a minimum of two trustees. For charitable trusts, at least three trustees are generally recommended for smoother functioning and compliance.

Can a trust be changed or revoked after it is created?

Only if it is set up as revocable, or if the trust deed specifically allows amendments. An irrevocable trust generally cannot be undone once assets are transferred — which is exactly what gives it stronger protection.

How much does it cost to create a family trust in India?

Professional drafting and registration typically fall in the ₹15,000–₹45,000 range, depending on the state and complexity. Transferring immovable property into the trust adds stamp duty, which is charged on the property’s value.

What is the difference between a public and a private trust?

A private trust benefits specific, identifiable people or a family and is governed by the Indian Trusts Act, 1882. A public trust benefits the general public for charitable or religious purposes and is governed by state laws.

How can WillJini help in setting up a trust?

WillJini offers end-to-end trust formation — discussing your objectives, structuring trustees and beneficiaries, drafting a lawyer-reviewed Trust Deed, and guiding you through registration and post-setup steps like obtaining a PAN and transferring assets into the trust.