6 MIN READ 
Trustee KYC documents help trustees understand who is connected to a trust, where the wealth came in, who controls key decisions and what risks may exist before onboarding begins. For settlors, this paperwork can feel heavy. In reality, it protects the trust, the trustee, the bank and the family’s long-term structure.
Good trust KYC is not only about passports. It is about identity, control, source of wealth, asset history and the purpose behind the trust.
Trusts can involve many roles. A single structure may include a settlor, trustees, protectors, beneficiaries, enforcers, underlying companies and investment accounts. Each role can affect control, benefit or risk.
International standards require adequate, accurate and up-to-date beneficial ownership information for express trusts and similar legal arrangements, including information on settlors, trustees and beneficiaries.
For trust onboarding, this means the trustee must look beyond the person signing the deed. The trustee needs to understand the full structure and the people who can control or benefit through it.
| Document type | Why trustees ask for it |
| Passport or government ID | Confirms identity of settlors, beneficiaries, protectors and key parties |
| Proof of address | Confirms residence and supports risk assessment |
| Source of wealth records | Shows how the family built the wealth |
| Source of funds records | Shows the origin of the assets entering the trust |
| Trust deed or draft deed | Confirms trust purpose, roles, powers and beneficiary class |
| Ownership chart | Shows companies, trusts, foundations and individuals linked to the structure |
| Tax residency details | Helps assess reporting and cross-border tax concerns |
| Bank references or financial statements | Supports trustee onboarding and later bank account opening |
Settlor KYC is usually one of the most important parts of trust onboarding. The settlor creates the trust and transfers assets into it. The trustee must understand who the settlor is, how the wealth was created and why the trust is being set up.
A settlor file usually includes identity proof, address proof, occupation details, business history, tax residency, source of wealth documents and source of funds documents for the first asset transfer.
For founders, source of wealth may include company sale agreements, dividend records, salary records, audited financial statements or investment exit documents. For inherited wealth, it may include probate papers, estate distribution records or family asset history.
The goal is simple. The trustee should be able to explain why the structure exists and how the assets were earned.
A trust KYC file should also cover beneficiaries, protectors and any person with control influence. DIFC AML rules require identification and verification of settlors, trustees, protectors, enforcers, beneficiaries and any other natural person with ultimate effective control over a trust.
Beneficiary KYC can be simpler for young children or remote discretionary beneficiaries, but trustees still need enough information to understand the risk profile. If a beneficiary is politically exposed, sanctioned, involved in litigation or based in a higher-risk country, extra checks may apply.
Protector KYC also matters because protectors may approve distributions, remove trustees or control key decisions. A protector is not just an adviser when the deed gives real power.
These two terms are often confused. Source of wealth explains how the person became wealthy overall. Source of funds explains where a specific transfer came in.
For example, a founder may have built wealth through a technology business. That is the source of wealth. If the first trust funding comes through proceeds received after a share sale, that sale agreement and bank statement help prove source of funds.
A good KYC checklist trust file should include both. Trustees may also ask for supporting documents in stages, especially when assets are moved later. This avoids a common problem: the trust is created first, but the bank rejects onboarding later because asset history is unclear.
Some trusts need deeper checks. This can happen because of high-value assets, complex ownership chains, higher-risk jurisdictions, politically exposed persons, unusual funding routes or unclear business activity.
BVI AML guidance treats trust risk as something that must be assessed. Normal risk requires relevant customer due diligence information, while higher-risk relationships require enhanced customer due diligence.
Enhanced checks may include:
This should not be viewed as distrust. It is part of protecting the trust and reducing regulatory risk.
Trustee onboarding is easier when the settlor prepares documents before the deed is finalised. Waiting until the bank asks for papers can delay the whole structure.
A practical onboarding sequence usually works like this:
This order helps the trustee spot issues early. For example, if assets are held through several companies, the ownership chart should be checked before asset transfer documents are drafted.
KYC is not a one-time upload. Trust records need updates when parties change, beneficiaries become active, new assets enter the trust or control rights shift.
Cayman AML regulations require collected trust beneficial ownership information to be accurate, up to date and updated on a timely basis. BVI beneficial ownership guidance also requires information on a trust beneficial owner’s role, such as settlor, trustee, protector, beneficiary or another person exercising ultimate effective control.
This is why trustees often request refresh documents. A passport may expire. A beneficiary may move to another country. A protector may step down. A new company may be added under the trust. The KYC file should reflect those changes.
Arnifi helps founders prepare trustee KYC files early so the structure does not get delayed later. We assist with entity setup documentation planning compliance readiness and banking preparation. For trust planning we help organise identity records ownership details and source of wealth evidence so legal and fiduciary teams can review the structure more smoothly.
They are identity, address, ownership, source of wealth, source of funds and trust structure records used by trustees to verify parties connected to a trust.
The settlor creates and funds the trust. The trustee needs to verify identity, wealth history, asset origin and the real purpose behind the structure.
Yes. Beneficiaries usually need some level of identification and risk screening, especially when they receive distributions or hold meaningful control rights.
KYC should be updated when key people, documents, assets, control rights, addresses or risk facts change. Trustees may also refresh records at set review intervals.
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