Death benefits not reliant on probate

A retirement savings specialist has confirmed the payment of an SMSF death benefit is not dependent upon any of the procedures associated with the deceased member’s estate.

.

In particular, Accurium technical superannuation adviser Jason Hurst noted the trustees of an SMSF where a member has passed away do not need to wait for probate before death benefits from the fund are paid out.

“Nothing in super law requires for a death benefit to be dealt with by the fund. [The Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act and Regulations do not] say that we need to wait for probate,” Hurst told attendees of the most recent Accurium technical webinar held last week.

“A [superannuation] death benefit generally isn’t an estate asset, so if the [SMSF] trustees are able to make that payment and they have all of the documentation [allowing them to make that payment] quicker than probate, it is certainly possible.”

However, he pointed out the fund’s trust deed needs to be reviewed before deciding to take this course of action.

“Again it all comes back to what the deed says. It seems that some retail super fund deeds require probate [before a death benefit can be paid] maybe if the death benefit is over a certain amount. Whether that could apply in an SMSF deed [is a possibility],” he said.

He warned a situation where the SMSF member who passed away is the sole member of the fund, other restrictions regarding a death benefit payment may also need consideration.

“[In this situation] we’ve got no one who can make decisions until we’re able to appoint [a replacement trustee]. So then [we need to determine if] the SMSF deed has a particular definition of an LPR (legal personal representative). Does it just say they need to be an executor of [the deceased member’s] will or does it say they need to be the executor of the will and [need to] receive probate to act?” he said.

“So under super law we don’t need to wait for probate, but there may be some other reasons why we [may need to do so].”

 

 

 

 

July 29, 2025
Darin Tyson-Chan
smsmagazine.com.au

More Articles

How Many Countries Divided From The Largest Empire throughout history

Check out the countries that have been born from some of the largest empires in...

Read full article

How to budget using the envelope method

Here's five simple steps to create a budget that doesn't involve tracking every expense . To...

Read full article

Call for SMSF ‘nudge’ in DBFO package

The peak SMSF body has called on the government to extend the member ‘nudge’ rules beyond industry and...

Read full article

Accountants united in support for changes

The three major accounting bodies have backed the changes to the Division 296 tax and have called for it to be...

Read full article

Beware pushy sales tactics targeting your super

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has warned Australians to beware of high-pressure...

Read full article

Investment and economic outlook, October 2025

Latest forecasts for investment returns and region-by-region economic outlook . Australia Modest...

Read full article

Determining what is an in-house asset can help determine investment strategy

It is important to understand what is and what isn’t an in-house asset to ensure compliance in an SMSF, a...

Read full article

Stress-test SMSF in preparation for Div 296

SMSFs that hold farms or small businesses should do a “stress test” on their funds in preparation for the...

Read full article

Heathmont Financial Services Pty Ltd (ABN 68 106 250 104) trading as Heathmont Financial Services is a Corporate Authorised Representative (No. 262098) of Knox Wealth Management Pty Ltd (ABN 74 630 256 227), Australian Financial Services Licence Number (AFSL) 513763.

Julian McGoldrick is an Authorised Representative (No. 262098) of Knox Wealth Management Pty Ltd AFSL 513763.

Financial Services Guide - Disclaimer & Privacy Policy

^