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Buying Property with SMSF: The Ultimate Guide to LRBAs and Bare Trusts

  • Writer: eliteaccounting
    eliteaccounting
  • Jan 13
  • 2 min read

Many Australians dream of using their superannuation to buy investment property. While the ATO allows this, the "Accounting Logic" behind it is very specific. If you miss a step, the tax consequences can be severe.



Here is how the structure works from a professional accounting perspective.


1. The Foundation: The SMSF and the Corporate Trustee

Before you look at a property, you need a Self-Managed Super Fund (SMSF). We strictly recommend using a Corporate Trustee (a company) rather than individual trustees. It provides better asset protection and makes it much easier to manage the fund's legal holdings over many decades.


2. The Engine: What is an LRBA?

An SMSF is generally not allowed to borrow money. The only exception is a Limited Recourse Borrowing Arrangement (LRBA).

  • "Limited Recourse" means that if the loan fails, the lender can only claim the property itself—they cannot "reach into" the rest of your super fund to take your other shares or cash.


3. The "Bare Trust" (Holding Trust)

This is where most people get confused. Under Australian law, the SMSF cannot hold the legal title of a mortgaged property directly.

  • We create a Bare Trust (also called a Custodian Trust).

  • The Bare Trust is the "Legal Owner" (it sits on the land title).

  • The SMSF is the "Beneficial Owner" (it receives the rent and pays the mortgage). Once the loan is fully paid off, the title is transferred from the Bare Trust to the SMSF.


4. The Accounting "Rules of the Game"

From an accounting perspective, there are three "Golden Rules" you must follow:

  • The Sole Purpose Test: The property must be bought strictly to provide retirement benefits. You (or your family) cannot live in it or rent it out to your own business (unless it is Commercial Property).

  • Single Acquirable Asset: One Bare Trust = One Title. You cannot buy a block of land and build a house on it using the same loan; the ATO views the "finished house" as a different asset than the "vacant land."

  • No Improvements with Borrowed Money: You can use your fund's cash to repair a property, but you cannot use borrowed money to improve or renovate it.

5. Why You Need a Specialist Accountant

Managing the paperwork for an LRBA is a "Document Trail" nightmare if you aren't organized. We manage:

  • The annual Financial Statements and Member Statements.

  • The independent external Audit (required every year).

  • Calculating the correct Market Valuations.

  • Monitoring your Contribution Caps to ensure you can cover the mortgage repayments.

How Elite Accounting Solutions Helps:

  • We set up the SMSF, Corporate Trustee, and Bare Trust correctly.

  • We handle the Annual Financials and Independent Audit.

  • We provide Proactive Tax Planning so you know exactly how much you can contribute to cover the mortgage.


Contact Us Today! We invite you to book a FREE, one hour introductory consultation to discuss your SMSF needs.

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