Overview
Tontine Trust provides fiduciary and administrative trust services only.
Tontine Trust Funds are structured as non-guaranteed, trust-based arrangements designed to facilitate longevity risk-sharing among participants without transferring risk to a third-party provider.
Tontine Trust does not provide investment services, portfolio management, investment advice, or insurance.
Tontine Trust Funds are not insurance contracts, annuities, pensions, investment products, or collective investment schemes.
Regulatory treatment depends on substance rather than terminology. When structured and operated as described on this site—without guarantees, underwriting, risk transfer, or pooled investment management—Tontine Trust Funds are legally feasible and consistent with existing regulatory doctrine in the European Union, the United Kingdom, the United States, and other comparable jurisdictions.
Nature of Services Provided
Fiduciary and Administrative Trust Services Only
Tontine Trust acts solely in a fiduciary and administrative capacity, including:
- establishing and administering individual trusts;
- holding and safeguarding trust assets;
- executing transactions strictly in accordance with trust documentation and lawful instructions;
- performing record-keeping, reporting, and operational administration; and
- ensuring compliance with applicable trust, AML, and fiduciary obligations.
Tontine Trust does not:
- select investments;
- manage portfolios;
- provide discretionary investment management;
- provide investment advice; or
- recommend or promote specific assets.
No information on this site is intended to influence investment decisions or to be relied upon as investment advice within the meaning of the FCA Handbook or equivalent regulatory frameworks in other jurisdictions.
All asset exposure arises solely from the terms of the trust and the choices of participants, not from any investment activity by Tontine Trust.
Tontine Trust Funds Are Not Investments
Tontine Trust Funds are not investment products.
They do not involve:
- the management of assets for investment return;
- reliance on the skill or discretion of a manager to generate profits; or
- an expectation of profit arising from the efforts of a promoter or third party.
Assets are held in individual trusts, and any distributions arise mechanically from:
- the remaining assets of each trust; and
- predefined trust rules relating to longevity and distribution timing.
Participation does not involve acquiring, holding, or disposing of investments as defined under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 or the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001, nor equivalent securities legislation in other jurisdictions.
Tontine Trust Funds Are Not Collective Investment Schemes
In particular:
- assets are not pooled into a common fund;
- each participant’s assets are held in a separate trust;
- there is no collective portfolio managed for shared investment return;
- no manager generates or targets returns on behalf of participants; and
- redistribution mechanics operate only as a function of predefined trust rules upon death, not pooled investment performance.
Accordingly, Tontine Trust Funds do not meet the defining characteristics of a collective investment scheme under UK law, including section 235 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, nor under equivalent EU or US frameworks.
Core Structural Characteristics
Tontine Trust Funds are defined by the following features:
- Trust-based ownership
Assets are held in individual trusts for the benefit of participants. - No guarantees
There are no guaranteed returns, minimum payments, or promises of lifetime income. - Longevity risk is realised, not transferred
Longevity outcomes depend on participant survival and remaining trust assets.
No trustee, administrator, sponsor, or third party assumes or underwrites longevity risk. - No underwriting or actuarial pricing
Contributions are not insurance premiums, and no party prices or assumes mortality or survival risk. - Mechanical distributions
Distributions are calculated as a percentage of the remaining trust balance and may increase, decrease, or cease over time.
These characteristics are fundamental to the legal and regulatory treatment of Tontine Trust Funds.
Why Tontine Trust Funds Are Not Insurance
Across major jurisdictions, insurance is generally defined by the combination of:
- the transfer of risk from an individual to a provider;
- a legally enforceable promise to pay a defined or guaranteed benefit; and
- the provider’s assumption of actuarial risk, supported by capital or solvency requirements.
Tontine Trust Funds do not meet these criteria.
- Longevity risk is not transferred to Tontine Trust or any provider.
- No guaranteed or defined benefits are promised.
- No party underwrites actuarial risk or maintains insurer-style reserves.
Tontine Trust administers trust arrangements only and does not bear insurance-type obligations.
European Union
Under EU law, including the Solvency II framework, insurance regulation applies where a provider assumes insured risk and promises defined benefits.
Tontine Trust Funds, when structured as non-guaranteed, trust-based arrangements in which longevity risk is realised by participants, do not constitute insurance under EU doctrine.
The EU has long recognised and permitted non-insurance arrangements involving longevity or survivorship outcomes without guarantees, including:
- non-guaranteed occupational and collective defined-contribution pension schemes;
- friendly societies and benefit societies; and
- mutual aid and solidarity-based arrangements.
Making Tontine Trust Funds available in Europe is therefore legally feasible and consistent with existing EU doctrine, provided the structure remains non-guaranteed, trust-based, and clearly disclosed.
Regulatory considerations in the EU primarily relate to:
- trust and fiduciary law;
- AML and transparency requirements;
- consumer disclosure standards; and
- financial-promotion and investor-classification rules,
rather than insurance or fund authorisation.
United Kingdom
UK law draws a similar distinction between insurance, investments, and non-guaranteed trust-based arrangements.
Tontine Trust Funds do not involve:
- the carrying on of regulated insurance business under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000; or
- the operation of a collective investment scheme.
Tontine Trust provides fiduciary and administrative trust services only.
Availability in the UK may be subject to:
- financial-promotion rules;
- investor classification (e.g. retail vs non-retail); and
- disclosure obligations,
but the underlying structure is not insurance and not an investment fund when operated as described.
United States
In the United States, insurance is generally defined as the transfer of risk from one party to another for consideration, coupled with a promise to pay a defined or guaranteed benefit.
Tontine Trust Funds do not involve:
- the underwriting of longevity or mortality risk by a provider;
- guaranteed outcomes; or
- the provision of investment management services.
Longevity outcomes depend solely on participant survival and the remaining assets of each trust.
When structured and disclosed as described, Tontine Trust Funds are distinguishable from insurance products, annuities, and investment funds under US law, although state-level trust, fiduciary, and consumer-protection rules may apply.
Investor Classification and Availability
Regulatory treatment and availability of Tontine Trust Funds may vary by jurisdiction and by participant classification.
In some jurisdictions, access may be limited to:
- non-retail, professional, or sophisticated participants; or
- private or bespoke trust arrangements.
Minimum contribution thresholds, eligibility criteria, and enhanced disclosures may apply to reflect local regulatory expectations.
Consumer Disclosure
Participation in predefined longevity rules applicable to individual Tontine Trust Funds involves longevity risk-sharing without guarantees.
- Distributions may increase, decrease, or cease.
- Participation as a trust beneficiary does not ensure profit, income stability, or preservation of capital.
- Early death may result in the loss of unused trust assets.
Clear and prominent disclosure of these characteristics is fundamental to the operation of Tontine Trust Funds.
Important Notice
Nothing on this site constitutes an offer of insurance, investment advice, or an investment product.
Tontine Trust provides fiduciary and administrative trust services only.
Availability and regulatory treatment may vary by jurisdiction.
United Kingdom Notice
This page and website is provided for general information only and does not constitute a financial promotion for the purposes of section 21 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000.
No invitation or inducement to engage in regulated investment activity is made, and no regulated investment activity is carried on.