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  • Tontines

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      Introduction to Tontines

      Start here if you are new to Tontines & longevity pooling

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      About Tontine Trust

      Find out more about who we are, how we got started and the mission we are on

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      Research & Whitepapers

      Read the latest academic papers and research advocating for more Tontines

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      Tontines in the News

      Read the latest news on Tontine Trust and the Tontine renaissance

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      Videos & Interviews

      Sit back and watch what the world says about Tontines

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      Download the Apps

      Download the Tontine App and manage your lifetime income from your mobile or tablet.

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      The Tontiner Blog

      Lifestyle tips for Tontiners that want to Live Long & Prosper®

  • Trust Funds

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      What is a Tontine Trust Fund?

      Understand what a Tontine Trust Fund is and how it delivers lifetime income

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      What is a Trust?

      Understand the basics of how Trusts work

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      Gold Tontines

      Lifetime Income Trusts backed by physical Gold, the world’s reserve asset

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      Bitcoin Tontines

      Lifetime Incomes backed by the worlds favorite digital asset

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      Tontine BOLD

      A Lifetime Income Trust backed by Bitcoin and Gold

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      Silver Tontines

      Lifetime Income Trusts backed by physical Silver

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      Islamic Tontines

      Naturally shariah compliant lifetime incomes based upon ethical risk sharing principles.

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      How it Works

      See how you easily can establish your individual lifetime income trust fund

  • Pensions

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      The TontineIRA®

      Transfer a standard IRA/401k to a lifetime income IRA with added longevity pooling

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      Tontine Trust Pensions

      Switch to a pension that that offers a steady income that will last as long as you do

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      Solutions for Pension Providers

      Our Tontines-as-a-Service platform enables you to add longevity pooling returns to your standard pension products

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      National Tontine Pensions

      Offer lifetime social security for citizens without relying on government guarantees

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      Islamic Pensions

      Award-winning naturally shariah compliant pensions for the muslim world.

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An introduction to:

Trusts


Why Do Trusts Exist?

Most people assume Trusts are only used by wealthy families but you've probably benefited from trusts your entire life..

In reality, many of the institutions people interact with every day are Trusts or rely on Trusts.

  • Pension Funds and retirement accounts
  • Universities & Charities including hospitals
  • Private Family Wealth Trusts

Trusts have been used around the world for centuries because they solve a remarkably simple problem:

How do you ensure that important assets continue to serve their intended purpose over long periods of time?

A Trust Is A Vehicle For Stewardship

People often compare Trusts to companies.

While both are widely used legal structures, they exist for very different purposes.

If You Want To...Use...
Run a businessA Company
Hold personal cashA Bank Account
Manage/protect assets for a long-term purposeA Trust

A company is designed to conduct business activities.

A Trust is designed to hold and administer assets according to predetermined rules and fiduciary duties.

Why Are Trusts So Widely Used?

A Trust legally separates assets from the individual, similar to how putting assets into a Company does so.

The difference is that Trusts are typically focused on managing and protecting assets rather than using the assets for a business purpose.

For centuries, families, charities and institutions have used Trusts to preserve and manage wealth according to long-term objectives rather than short-term circumstances.

This simple idea has made Trusts one of the world's most enduring and internationally respected wealth structures.

How Does A Trust Work?

Every Trust has three key participants:

The Settlor

The person who contributes assets to the Trust.

The Trustee

The person or institution responsible for administering the Trust according to its governing rules and fiduciary duties.

The Beneficiary

The person or people who benefit from the Trust.

The Trustee does not own the assets for their own benefit. Their role is to administer the assets in the best interest of the beneficiaries of the Trust.

Note: When we refer to “Members”, we are referring to the Beneficiary whom is also ordinarily the Settlor as well.

Why Does Tontine Trust Use Trusts?

A Tontine is a strategy for sharing longevity risk.

The Member enjoys the benefit of their wealth while they are alive but those assets need to be shared when the Member has passed away.

A Trust is the legal structure that makes it possible because the Trustees are irrevocablyAn irrevocable trust is a standalone legal entity established under common law by a fiduciary for the benefit of one or more beneficiaries. Irrevocable trusts are often formed in jurisdictions where they are sheltered from taxation and in which the assets of the trust are protected from creditors. instructed in the Trust Agreement to redistribute the assets upon the death of the Member.

What this means is that, once assets are contributed to the Trust, they cannot ordinarily be claimed by creditors or inheritors either during the Members lifetime or upon the Members death.

A Tontine Trust Fund combines the proven asset protection of a Trust with the benefits of longevity pooling.

This allows the assets to be administered according to long-term objectives of helping members enjoy more retirement from the wealth they already have.

Trusts Have Endured For A Reason

Technologies change.

Markets change.

Governments change.

Yet Trusts have remained one of the world's most widely used structures for preserving and managing wealth, sometimes over centuries.

Their enduring popularity comes from a simple idea:

Important assets should be administered according to long-term objectives rather than short-term circumstances.

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Terms & Conditions

Privacy Policy

Legal & Regulatory

For Banks

For Regulators

References to ‘tontine’ on this site describe the longevity-risk sharing mechanism used to adjust trust distributions; distributions are made by the trustee in accordance with the trust terms.

Tontine Trust Europe KB (“Tontine Trustees” or the "Trustee") is a Swedish authorised trust management company. We provide fiduciary trust services, including the establishment and administration of irrevocable trusts and the management of trust assets, in accordance with applicable trust laws.

We establish irrevocable lifetime Tontine trusts for clients worldwide, except where restricted by local law.

Our fintech platform enables individuals to establish an individual Tontine Trust Fund efficiently and securely. The patented platform supports trust administration, asset selection, distribution modelling in accordance with predefined trust terms and applicable fiduciary duties.

Information provided on this website or through our platforms is general information only and does not constitute personal financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. You should seek independent professional advice before making decisions.

The selection of assets held within a Tontine Trust Fund is the responsibility of the member. Tontine Trustees is not responsible for outcomes resulting from a member’s asset preferences, except to the extent required by our fiduciary duties in administering the trust.

Trust assets are subject to market risk, and losses — including loss of principal — are possible.

Any illustrations or examples of lifetime distributions shown on this website or in related materials are indicative only.
Distributions from a Tontine Trust Fund are not fixed or guaranteed and may increase or decrease over time based on factors including asset performance, longevity assumptions, and the survival experience of members within the same tontine class.

Distribution estimates are generated using probabilistic and financial models that are regularly reviewed and adjusted to reflect changing conditions. Estimates are for illustrative purposes only and are not predictions or guarantees.

Redistribution on Death

When a Tontine Trust member dies, any leftover trust balance is redistributed among the surviving members of the same Tontine Class, in accordance with predefined trust rules governing survivorship-based allocation of beneficial interests. As a result, no trust balance remains for inheritance by spouses, children, other beneficiaries, or creditors.

Members who wish to provide separately for family members should consider establishing and funding separate trusts for those individuals.