Overview
How a VISTA Trust Works
In a standard trust, a trustee holding shares in a family company has a duty to act as a prudent investor — which may require selling those shares if the company underperforms. For a family that wants to preserve its business across generations, this creates a fundamental tension: the trust structure protects ownership but the trustee could force a sale. The VISTA trust solves this problem by disapplying the duty to sell for designated VISTA company shares.
The VISTA trust also addresses management continuity through the office of director mechanism. In a standard trust the trustee as shareholder could remove directors by shareholder vote. In a VISTA trust the trust deed specifies rules for director appointment, succession and removal — independently of the trustee's shareholder powers. This means management passes according to the family's plan, not the trustee's commercial judgement.
VISTA trusts are unique to the BVI and require a BVI Business Company to hold the designated shares. They cannot be established under any other governing law. A BVI-qualified law firm must draft the trust instrument and a BVI-licensed trustee must administer it.
VISTA vs Standard Trust
How a VISTA Trust Differs from a Standard Trust
| Feature | Standard Trust | VISTA Trust |
| Duty to review shareholding | Trustee must act as prudent investor — must regularly review and consider selling underperforming assets | Duty to review and consider selling VISTA company shares is disapplied |
| Management continuity | Trustee as shareholder can remove directors by vote at any time | Director appointment governed by office of director rules in trust deed — independent of trustee |
| Perpetuity period | Standard BVI trust: 100 years | Up to 360 years — longest globally |
| Applicable company | Any company | Must be a BVI Business Company |
| Governing law | Any jurisdiction | BVI law only |
| Primary purpose | General wealth holding and succession | Family business succession and long-term preservation |
Key Considerations
When a VISTA Trust Is Appropriate
Family Business Preservation
The VISTA trust is specifically designed for families who want to place a business into a trust for succession planning without the risk that the trustee will force a sale. The 360-year perpetuity reflects multi-generational succession intent.
BVI Company Required
VISTA only works with BVI Business Companies. If the family business is held through a Cayman, Jersey or other offshore company, the company would need to be redomiciled to the BVI — or the VISTA structure may not be appropriate.
Director Succession Planning
The office of director mechanism requires careful drafting to reflect the family's succession intentions. A BVI-qualified trust lawyer must design the director appointment rules to ensure management passes as intended across generations.
Interaction with CRS
VISTA trusts are subject to CRS reporting obligations if classified as Reporting Financial Institutions. Settlors, trustees, protectors and beneficiaries may be reportable controlling persons. Always obtain qualified advice on CRS classification before establishing a VISTA trust.