Private Wealth & Family Office

Labuan: A Strategic Jurisdiction for Private Wealth Preservation

Confiance Labuan supports private clients across the full lifecycle of private wealth planning, from structuring and advisory to administration, governance and long-term stewardship.

Labuan International Business and Financial Centre (IBFC) is recognised as a sophisticated jurisdiction for private wealth structuring, succession planning and family governance. Its framework is supported by:

Families and founders use Labuan structures to achieve:

Long-term wealth preservation

Orderly ownership of operating companies and investment portfolios

Protection against personal, commercial and political risk

Clear succession planning across generations

Governance discipline to preserve family harmony

Tax Treatment

Tax outcomes for Labuan private wealth structures are governed by:

The effective tax position depends on:

In practice, outcomes generally fall within:

Distributions from Labuan trusts and foundations to beneficiaries are generally treated as tax exempt in Malaysia under prevailing exemption orders, which supports efficient intergenerational wealth transfer when structures are properly designed and compliant.

However, failure of substance compliance will subject to 24% tax on audited net profits treatment.

Trust Structures in Labuan

A Labuan trust, governed by the Labuan Trusts Act 1996, is a legal relationship where a settlor transfers assets to a trustee (a licensed Labuan trust company) to hold and administer for beneficiaries or stated purposes.

Trusts are commonly used for:

Typical trust types include:

All Labuan trusts must appoint a licensed Labuan trust company as trustee.

Private Trust Company (PTC) – Enhanced Governance & Family Control

A Private Trust Company (PTC) is a structure where the trustee itself is a company established to act only for one family (or connected families), rather than a third-party institutional trustee.


This allows the family to:

Appoint family members or trusted advisers to the board

Retain strategic control over trustee decisions

Embed family governance philosophy

Maintain continuity across generations

Reduce reliance on external trustee discretion

Provide long-term succession stability with strong governance and regulatory alignment

Trust vs Private Trust Company (PTC)

Aspect Traditional Trust Private Trust Company
Trustee Professional trust company Trustee company controlled by the family
Family involvement Limited influence High degree of involvement and control
Governance flexibility Standard trustee framework Fully customisable governance
Complexity Simpler More sophisticated
Best suited for Most families UHNW families, founders, complex structures
Longevity Depends on trustee continuity Designed for multi-generation continuity

PTCs are commonly adopted by entrepreneurial families, founders and families with multi-jurisdictional assets who wish to institutionalise governance within their private wealth structures.

For more information, refer to Offshore Entity & Redomiciliation

Labuan Foundations – A Powerful Wealth Holding Vehicle

A Labuan foundation, governed by the Labuan Foundations Act 2010, is a separate legal entity that owns assets in its own name and operates according to a charter.

It is increasingly used as the ultimate investment holding structure for families.

Key parties and roles within a Labuan foundation:

  • Founder

    Establishes the foundation and contributes assets

  • Council Members

    Responsible for governance and decision-making

  • Officer

    Oversees administration and regulatory compliance

  • Secretary

    Maintains statutory records and filings

  • Supervisor

    Mandatory for charitable foundations; optional for private foundations as an added governance safeguard

Why Families Prefer Foundations for Long-Term Wealth Planning

Preserving ownership of family businesses

Foundations can hold shares in operating companies as a single long-term owner, avoiding fragmentation of ownership across heirs and preserving:

  • Strategic control
  • Voting coherence
  • Business continuity

Preserving family harmony

Beneficiaries of a foundation have no legal ownership rights, only benefits granted under the charter. This helps reduce:

  • Entitlement disputes
  • Family conflicts
  • Succession uncertainty

Strong ring-fencing against foreign claims

The Labuan Foundations Act includes statutory protection limiting the enforceability of foreign judgments (including inheritance, marital or creditor claims) after a prescribed period unless fraud is proven to a high threshold. This provides meaningful protection for cross-border families.

High confidentiality

Properly structured foundations are regarded as private and discreet vehicles suitable for sensitive family wealth arrangements.

CRS positioning (structure-dependent)

A private family foundation that does not carry on financial intermediation and is structured purely for holding family assets is generally not classified as a financial institution, and therefore typically falls outside CRS reporting obligations, subject to proper classification and professional assessment.

Islamic (Waqf) and Conventional Foundations

Labuan supports both

Islamic foundations, including waqf-style perpetual endowment structures

Conventional foundations

Waqf-style foundations are often used for

Religious endowments

Education legacies

Long-term philanthropy

Social impact objectives

Family Office Architecture & Malaysia Family Office Incentive

A family office is not a licensed activity under Labuan law. Instead, it is an operating model built around legal vehicles such as trusts and foundations.

Malaysia has introduced a national Family Office incentive framework through the Forest City Special Financial Zone, supported by policy announcements from the Securities Commission Malaysia and the Ministry of Finance, to attract ultra-high-net-worth families.

Commonly referenced features include:

  • Tax incentive of up to 10 + 10 years on qualifying income (subject to approval)

  • Minimum Assets Under Management (AUM): typically RM30 million and above

  • Requirement for local substance, including staff, operations and governance in Malaysia

  • Focus on genuine wealth management activities

In practice, families adopting this framework commonly structure their ecosystem as:

  • Top layer: Labuan trust or foundation (ultimate asset holding and succession vehicle)

  • Middle layer: Malaysia family office Holding companies (SFO and SFOV)

  • Operational layer: Subsidiaries managing investments, governance and reporting

Families who do not apply for the incentive may still establish a fully functional private family office using Labuan trusts or foundations as the legal backbone.

For more information, refer to Business Support (Family Office Ops)

Regional comparison

Jurisdiction Malaysia (Forest City FO) Singapore (13O / 13U) Hong Kong (Single FO Regime)
Regulator Securities Commission Malaysia MAS IRD / SFC
Indicative AUM From ~RM30m SGD 10–20m+ HKD 30m+
Tax incentive Up to 10 + 10 years Tax exemption on qualifying income Profits tax concession
Substance required Yes Yes Yes
Operating cost Low–moderate High High

Many families therefore adopt a hybrid model:


Labuan for legal wealth preservation + Malaysia for family office operations.

Confiance Private Wealth & Family Office Services

Confiance Labuan works closely with its sister company, Confiance Family Office, to deliver an integrated private wealth platform.

Structuring & Advisory

Administration Services

Family Office Support

 

Family Governance Advisory

Compliance, KYC & Policy Frameworks

Frequently Asked Questions

A trust uses a professional trustee. A PTC allows the family to control the trustee company, offering greater governance and long-term control.

With our presence across Malaysia, Labuan, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia and Bhutan, and deep expertise in cross-border structuring, we help families navigate complex regional dynamics while preserving legacy with clarity and confidence.

Contact sales@myconfiancegroup.com to set an appointment for a confidential discussion.