Control, Comfort and Complexity: Balancing Family Involvement with Substance in Offshore Structures
Standard Bank trustees outline why African families increasingly need to give up day-to-day control of offshore fiduciary structures, as POEM and substance rules tighten across South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and other jurisdictions.
By
Standard Bank Jersey
Published
26 May 2026


A New Generation of Globally Active Families
At Standard Bank we have been fortunate to work with African families for decades, more than 30 years in the international fiduciary space and over 100 years domestically in South Africa. Over that time, one thing has become increasingly clear, families operating across the continent are becoming more sophisticated, more global, and more commercially aware. Their fiduciary structures frequently span multiple jurisdictions, asset classes, and generations.
Alongside this growing sophistication, a familiar theme has emerged. Trustees and advisers must structure and manage wealth carefully, if estate and succession planning is to remain effective and endure over time.
The Natural Desire to Retain Control
We are frequently approached by both matriarchs and patriarchs to establish family structures. These individuals are often first-generation entrepreneurs, looking to structure self-made wealth, or the second generation working in an already established family business, that has experienced significant growth or a liquidity event. They will have been pivotal in building a business which has reached a sufficient size, so that it can generate wealth for future generations. They will have built businesses, taken risks, and worked hard to accumulate this wealth and, unsurprisingly, they feel a strong connection to these assets. Often, they wish to remain closely involved in how they are managed.
From a personal and commercial perspective, that instinct makes complete sense. From a legal, tax, and regulatory standpoint, however, this can be problematic, especially when offshore structures are involved.
Offshore fiduciary structures, whether trusts or investment companies, should only ever be established following expert bespoke legal and tax advice. This advice should set out, in clear terms, how the structure is to be administered, where decisions must be taken, and who can (and cannot) exercise control. For professional trustees, adherence to this advice is mandatory, as a failure to adhere to this, can result in potentially disastrous consequences, for both the structure and for the family it is intended to protect.
Residence, Substance and Effective Management Matter
Much of this comes down to residence and control. Where does the settlor live? Where do those exercising control sit? How do local laws in those jurisdictions treat retained powers, influence, or effective management? These questions have always mattered, but they are becoming increasingly important as tax authorities and regulators continue to refine attribution, substance, and antiavoidance rules.
The End of “Control Without Consequence”
As a result, advisers across the continent are now more frequently concluding that, settlors need to make a genuine and completed gift into a fiduciary structure, often through an irrevocable discretionary gift, if the planning is to withstand scrutiny. The era of retaining extensive control while still expecting full tax, assetprotection, and succession benefits is, in most cases, consigned to the past.
POEM: Increasing Scrutiny Across African Jurisdictions
The same principles apply in the corporate context. If a company is intended to benefit from being established in a jurisdiction such as Jersey, then real control and effective management must sit in Jersey. Board decisions, strategy, and oversight cannot simply be exercised from the client’s home jurisdiction without undermining the structure’s integrity. Many jurisdictions across Africa have rules and guidance that support this focus on substance and effective management (for example, South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Egypt, Angola, Zambia, Botswana, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ghana etc), although the precise tests and terminology differ by country.
Of the sub-Saharan regional hubs, the Kenyan courts recently heard a case, the MKOPA LLC v Commissioner of Domestic Taxes (Kenya TAT, 2024). This is interesting, as though the taxpayer ultimately won the case, it demonstrated how easily groups with African operations can fall foul of Place of Effective Management (‘POEM’) when real decisionmaking drifts into the local jurisdiction.
South Africa has also issued useful guidance on the matter in a recent Interpretation Note 6 (issue 3), which explains SARS’ POEM approach in detail (board authority, delegation, operational vs. toplevel management).
Nigeria has also recently introduced material changes through the Nigerian Tax Act 2025, which includes a POEMstyle concept. This is a significant change to its tax framework which, in practice, enables Nigeria to tax a foreignincorporated company on worldwide income where management, strategic decisionmaking, or effective control occurs in Nigeria (subject to any applicable treaty and the specific facts).
When Excessive Control Undermines Protection
Excessive control can weaken the robustness of a structure, leaving it vulnerable to challenge by creditors or authorities. Tax authorities may look through the arrangement entirely, treating the assets as if they were never transferred in the first place or tax resident in country. Asset protection can fall away, regulatory issues may arise, and banking relationships can become strained.
Staying Involved Without Crossing the Line
None of this means that families must be entirely disengaged. On the contrary, there are well established and sensible ways, for clients to remain involved without crossing the line. Letters of Wishes, properly defined protector roles, carefully drafted retained powers, and clear governance frameworks, all have an important role to play. Regular meetings with a trustee representative and periodic reviews, are essential. A structure is only effective if it evolves with a family’s needs, and with legislative or regulatory change. What worked well five or ten years ago, may no longer be appropriate for the reasons noted.
Common Missteps That Create LongTerm Risk
Experience suggests that, where problems tend to arise, it is not through bad intent, but rather through familiar and avoidable missteps. These include pushing influence too far, disregarding professional advice, failing to document decisionmaking properly, or allowing structures to drift without periodic reassessment. Over time, small incremental compromises, can accumulate into material risk.
The Trustee’s Role in Managing Difficult Conversations
For trustees and advisers, managing this dynamic, requires more than technical expertise. It requires the confidence to have difficult conversations with settlors and founders, who are used to unilateral decisionmaking. These are rarely comfortable discussions, but they are essential. Avoiding them does not protect the client or the structure; it can indicate gaps in trustee or serviceprovider governance and merely delays the problem.
Stepping Back to Preserve Wealth Across Generations
Preserving wealth across generations is rarely straightforward. It demands discipline, thoughtful structuring, and—perhaps most challenging of all—a willingness to accept that, effective planning sometimes requires stepping back from having direct control. For families who can strike that balance, the rewards in terms of stability, protection, and longevity are considerable.

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