Labuan IBFC Licensed Trust Company
Labuan IBFC

Labuan Trusts

A common-law structure for asset protection, succession planning and confidential wealth management across multiple jurisdictions. Governed by the Labuan Trusts Act 1996, with a Labuan FSA licensed trustee and no public register.

Legislation
Labuan Trusts Act 1996
Trustee
Licensed Trust Company
Register
Confidential, No Public Register
Tax
3% on Audited Profits or 0% Investment Holding

What is a Labuan Trust?

A Labuan trust is a common-law arrangement governed by the Labuan Trusts Act 1996. The trustee holds assets for the benefit of named beneficiaries under the terms of a trust deed, creating a legal separation between the settlor and the assets that continues beyond the settlor's lifetime.

The key parties are: the settlor (who transfers assets into trust), the trustee (who must be a Labuan FSA licensed trust company, such as Signature Trust), and the beneficiaries. An optional protector can be appointed to supervise the trustee. The settlor may also be a beneficiary.

Because Labuan trust licences are issued only to companies that meet the Labuan FSA fit-and-proper standards under the Labuan Financial Services and Securities Act 2010, a Labuan trust offers institutional governance combined with the flexibility of common-law trust law.

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Types of Labuan trusts

Why use a Labuan Trust

Strong Creditor Protection

Under Section 11 of the Labuan Trusts Act 1996, asset transfers into trust cannot be challenged after two years. A creditor must also prove both an intent to defraud and insolvency at the time of transfer.

Confidentiality by Design

There is no public register of Labuan trusts. The existence, terms and beneficiaries of the trust remain confidential and are not accessible by third parties.

Licensed, Regulated Trustee

A Labuan trust must have a Labuan FSA licensed trust company as trustee. This delivers institutional governance, fit-and-proper standards and ongoing regulatory oversight.

Worldwide Asset Holding

A Labuan trust can hold shares in foreign companies, real estate, bank accounts and investment portfolios. The trust deed governs all assets transferred in, regardless of their location.

What a Labuan trust requires

How to set up a Labuan Trust

1

Consultation

We discuss your objectives, family circumstances and the assets to be settled. We confirm a trust is the right structure and identify any cross-border considerations.

2

Deed Drafting

We draft the trust deed to your specific situation: type of trust, trustee powers, beneficiary class, distribution rules and any reserved powers or protector arrangements.

3

Onboarding

We complete KYC on the settlor, beneficiaries and source of funds, finalise the deed and execute the trust with Signature Trust appointed as licensed trustee.

4

Funding & Administration

Assets are transferred into the trust. We administer the structure on an ongoing basis: trustee records, accounts, distributions and regulatory compliance with Labuan FSA.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about Labuan trusts.

What is the difference between a Labuan trust and a foundation?

A trust is a common-law arrangement in which a trustee holds assets on behalf of beneficiaries. A foundation is a separate legal entity that owns assets in its own name, governed by a foundation charter. Both provide asset protection and succession planning. Clients from civil-law jurisdictions often prefer foundations; clients from common-law backgrounds often prefer trusts.

Can a non-Malaysian set up a Labuan trust?

Yes. Labuan trusts can be established by non-Malaysian residents. The settlor, beneficiaries and assets can all be foreign. There is no requirement for any Malaysian connection to establish a Labuan trust.

Who can act as trustee for a Labuan trust?

Under Section 7(4) of the Labuan Trusts Act 1996, a Labuan trust must have a licensed Labuan trust company as one of its trustees. Trust companies are licensed by Labuan FSA under the Labuan Financial Services and Securities Act 2010. Signature Trust holds a Labuan FSA trust licence and is authorised to act as trustee.

Is a Labuan trust registered publicly?

No. There is no public register of Labuan trusts. The existence, terms and beneficiaries of a Labuan trust are confidential and not accessible by third parties.

Can a Labuan trust hold assets in multiple countries?

Yes. A Labuan trust can hold assets located anywhere in the world, including shares in foreign companies, real estate, bank accounts and investment portfolios. The Labuan trust deed governs all assets transferred into the trust regardless of their location.

How does a Labuan trust protect against creditors?

Under Section 11 of the Labuan Trusts Act 1996, a creditor wishing to challenge an asset transfer into trust must prove both that the settlor intended to defraud that specific creditor and that the settlor was insolvent at the time of transfer. The challenge window is time-limited: once two years have passed from the date the creditor's cause of action arose, the transfer cannot be challenged at all. Even within that two-year window, a creditor who fails to commence action within one year of the transfer date loses the right to challenge.

Want to explore whether a Labuan trust fits?

Speak with our licensed trust team, or browse our full range of corporate and fiduciary services.