
The Indian Trusts Act, 1882 is a law that gives the basic legal framework for private trusts in India.
A trust is created when one person transfers or holds property for the benefit of another person. The person creating the trust is usually called the author or settlor. The person managing the trust property is called the trustee. The person who receives the benefit is called the beneficiary.
The Act covers important points such as:
India Code lists the key provisions under the Indian Trusts Act, 1882, including lawful purpose, trust of immovable property, creation of trust, who may create trusts, subject of trust, and who may be beneficiary.
The Indian Trusts Act, 1882 mainly applies to private trusts. A private trust is created for specific people or a specific group of beneficiaries, such as family members, children, dependents, or named individuals.
It is important to understand this because many people confuse private trusts with public or charitable trusts.
The Act is relevant for:
The Act is generally not the main law for public charitable or religious trusts. Public trusts, charitable trusts, religious endowments, and NGO-style structures may need to follow separate state public trust laws, charity commissioner rules, income tax registrations, or other laws depending on the state and purpose.
So, if a family creates a private trust for family property or succession planning, the Indian Trusts Act is highly relevant. If the trust is for charity or public benefit, other laws may also apply.
The main purpose of the Indian Trusts Act is to make private trusts clear, lawful, and properly managed. It protects both the trust property and the beneficiaries.
A private trust must be clear. If the trust deed is vague, the trust may create disputes, tax problems, or difficulty in asset transfer.
A valid private trust usually needs these essentials:
Section 6 of the Indian Trusts Act says that a trust is created when the author indicates with reasonable certainty the intention to create a trust, the purpose of the trust, the beneficiary, and the trust property.
The Act repeatedly refers to “trustee duties,” and Sections 11 to 22 set out what those duties actually are. A trustee holds a position of trust — not ownership — and must manage the property with the same care a reasonable person would apply to their own affairs. In broad terms, a trustee must:
A trustee also has powers — for example, to incur expenses to protect the trust, to apply property for a minor beneficiary’s maintenance, and, where the deed allows, to sell, lease, or invest. Crucially, a trustee must not make a personal profit from the trust or use trust assets for private benefit. Breach of these duties can make the trustee personally liable to make good any resulting loss.
The other side of a trustee’s duties is the beneficiary’s rights, set out in Sections 55 to 69. These rights are what give the beneficiary a real, enforceable interest in the trust rather than a mere expectation. A beneficiary generally has the right to:
These protections are the practical reason a clearly drafted deed matters: vague beneficiary clauses weaken exactly the rights the Act is designed to secure.
The Indian Trusts Act explains how a private trust is created. But registration depends on the type of property involved and the Registration Act, 1908.
The most important point is this: if the trust involves immovable property, registration is generally required.
For example, if land, house, flat, or commercial property is transferred into a private trust, the trust deed should usually be in writing, signed, and registered.
Section 5 of the Indian Trusts Act deals with trusts of immovable and movable property. It states that a trust of immovable property can be created by a non-testamentary written instrument signed by the author or trustee and registered, or by a will.
The Registration Act, 1908 also becomes important. Section 17 of the Registration Act lists documents for which registration is compulsory, including certain documents that create or transfer rights in immovable property.
For movable property, such as cash, shares, or investments, registration may not always be compulsory. Still, a written trust deed is strongly advisable because it records the trust terms clearly.
A private trust registration process usually involves:
Stamp duty and registration charges vary from state to state — there is no single all-India fee. As a rough guide, where no immovable property is settled, many states charge only a modest fixed stamp duty on the trust deed (often a few hundred rupees). Where immovable property is transferred into the trust, stamp duty is typically charged on the value of that property — similar to a conveyance, and in several states running to a few percent of value — plus registration charges (commonly around 1%). Always confirm the exact rate against your state’s current stamp schedule before executing the deed, as these figures change.
The exact document list may change depending on the state, Sub-Registrar office, and whether immovable property is involved. Still, most private trust registrations require the following:
| Document | Purpose |
| Trust deed | Main legal document that creates and defines the trust |
| PAN and ID proof of settlor | Identifies the person creating the trust |
| PAN and ID proof of trustees | Identifies the people managing the trust |
| Beneficiary details | Shows who will benefit from the trust |
| Trust property details | Shows what assets are placed in the trust |
| Address proof of trust office | Used for official trust records |
| Property documents | Required if land, house, flat, or commercial property is transferred |
| Stamp duty proof | Shows that the deed is properly stamped |
| Witness details | Needed for execution and registration |
| Registration fee proof | Required where the deed is registered |
If immovable property is involved, the Sub-Registrar may also ask for title papers, previous sale deed, property tax receipts, valuation details, and other local documents.
The Indian Trusts Act does not decide income tax rates. It explains trust creation and trustee duties. Taxation of private trusts is governed by the Income Tax Act, mainly through the provisions on representative assessees (Sections 160 to 167). In simple words, tax depends on how the trust is structured — and the single most important factor is whether the beneficiaries’ shares are determinate (known) or indeterminate (discretionary).
What is the MMR in practice? It is the rate applicable to the highest income slab of an individual — the top rate of 30% plus applicable surcharge and 4% cess — which currently works out to roughly 39%, and historically to about 42.7% under the old regime’s highest surcharge. Because it is fixed by each year’s Finance Act, the exact figure changes annually. A 2025 ruling by the Special Bench of the Mumbai Income Tax Appellate Tribunal also clarified that, for private discretionary trusts, the surcharge component of the MMR should be applied on a slab basis according to the trust’s actual income, not automatically at the highest rate.
There is one important exception worth knowing: a discretionary trust created by will, exclusively for a dependent relative, and which is the only such trust declared by that person, can be taxed at normal individual rates rather than at the MMR.
| Trust Type | Broad Tax Treatment |
| Specific / determinate trust | Trustee taxed as representative assessee at each beneficiary’s applicable rate (Section 161) |
| Discretionary trust | Entire income generally taxed at the Maximum Marginal Rate (Section 164), subject to exceptions |
| Revocable trust | Income may be clubbed with the settlor (Sections 61–63) |
| Trust with business income | Business income may attract MMR (Section 161(1A)), subject to conditions |
| Charitable trust | Separate tax regime under Sections 11–13; not the focus of this guide |
Before creating a private trust, tax treatment should be checked carefully. The way beneficiary shares, trustee powers, income distribution, and revocation clauses are written can push a trust from beneficiary-rate taxation into MMR — so drafting and tax review go hand in hand. (Note: this reflects the position as of 2026 under the Income Tax Act, 1961; a new Income Tax Act, 2025 is set to replace it, so confirm the current provisions before you file.)
Suppose a father wants to secure a flat and a portfolio of shares for his eight-year-old daughter. He sets up an irrevocable private trust, transfers the flat and shares into it, names his brother as trustee, and clearly fixes his daughter as the sole beneficiary with a defined share.
Because immovable property (the flat) is involved, the trust deed must be in writing, stamped, and registered with the Sub-Registrar. The trust obtains a PAN and opens its own bank account. Since the beneficiary and her share are clearly determinate, the trust is a specific trust — so its income is taxed at the rates applicable to the daughter, not at the maximum marginal rate. Had the father instead left distribution entirely to the trustee’s discretion among several relatives, the trust would likely have been discretionary and exposed to MMR. The same assets, structured two different ways, produce very different tax outcomes — which is exactly why the deed’s wording matters.
WillJini helps individuals and families with private trust documentation, trust deed drafting, trustee and beneficiary clauses, wills, and estate planning documents.
The Indian Trusts Act gives the legal framework, but the actual strength of a private trust depends on the trust deed. The deed should clearly explain the purpose, trust property, trustees, beneficiaries, trustee powers, distribution rules, and tax-sensitive clauses. WillJini helps families prepare clear documents so trust creation and succession planning become easier to understand and implement.
The Indian Trusts Act, 1882 is the main law that governs private trusts in India. It explains how trusts are created, who can create them, who can be trustees, and what duties trustees must follow.
Yes. A private family trust is generally covered by private trust principles under the Indian Trusts Act, 1882. It is usually created for specific family members or dependents.
Under Sections 11–22, a trustee must execute the trust as directed, protect the trust property, act with reasonable care, remain impartial between beneficiaries, keep proper accounts, invest funds appropriately, and never profit personally from the trust. Breaching these duties can make the trustee personally liable.
Registration is generally required when the trust involves immovable property such as land, house, flat, or commercial property. For movable assets, registration may not always be compulsory, but a written deed is advisable.
A valid private trust needs a lawful purpose, clear intention, a competent settlor, an identifiable beneficiary, definite trust property, and a trustee who can manage the property.
Private trusts are taxed under the Income Tax Act, not directly under the Indian Trusts Act. A specific (determinate) trust is taxed at each beneficiary’s applicable rate under Section 161, while a discretionary (indeterminate) trust is generally taxed at the Maximum Marginal Rate under Section 164. Revocable trusts may have income clubbed with the settlor.
Under Sections 77–78, a trust is extinguished when its purpose is fully fulfilled, becomes unlawful, or becomes impossible to fulfil — or when the trust is revoked in the manner allowed by the deed or with the consent of competent beneficiaries.
Proper drafting is important because unclear clauses can create disputes, tax issues (including exposure to the maximum marginal rate), trustee confusion, and problems in managing or transferring trust property.