Cook Islands Trusts

A Cook Islands trust is an offshore asset protection trust that places assets under a foreign trustee governed by Cook Islands law. The Cook Islands does not recognize U.S. court judgments, requires creditors to prove fraudulent transfer beyond a reasonable doubt, and bars transfer challenges after one to two years.

No creditor has successfully recovered assets from a properly established Cook Islands trust in more than three decades of contested litigation. The trust costs $20,000 to $25,000 to establish and $5,000 to $8,000 annually to maintain. It is best suited for people whose total assets exceed $1 million or whose liquid assets exceed $500,000.

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How Does a Cook Islands Trust Protect Assets?

A U.S. court judgment has no legal effect in the Cook Islands. A creditor cannot enforce it against trust assets. The creditor must file a new proceeding in the Cook Islands, hire Cook Islands counsel, and relitigate the claim from scratch under Cook Islands law.

The Cook Islands International Trusts Act creates four barriers that make collection impractical.

First, the creditor must prove fraudulent transfer beyond a reasonable doubt, the criminal standard of proof rather than the civil preponderance standard used in U.S. courts.

Second, the creditor must post a bond of at least $100,000 with the Cook Islands court before filing. If the creditor loses, the bond is forfeited to cover the trust’s legal costs.

Third, the statute of limitations is short. A creditor must file within two years after funding the trust or one year after their cause of action arose, whichever expires sooner. Once the deadline passes, the Cook Islands courts will not hear the claim. Each transfer starts its own clock.

Fourth, the trust deed contains a duress clause that prevents the trustee from following the settlor’s instructions when those instructions are made under court pressure. If a U.S. court orders the settlor to repatriate trust assets, the duress clause activates and the trustee refuses. The settlor can show the court that they asked the trustee to comply and were refused, creating what courts have called an “impossibility” defense.

In practice, most disputes never reach the Cook Islands. The creditor’s collection attorney weighs the cost: litigating overseas, meeting a criminal burden of proof, posting a $100,000 bond, and beating a short statute of limitations with no guarantee of success. In most cases, the creditor settles for a fraction of the judgment or abandons collection entirely.

Case Law

Cook Islands trusts have been tested repeatedly in U.S. courts. In FTC v. Affordable Media (the Anderson case), the Federal Trade Commission attempted to force repatriation of Cook Islands trust assets and failed to recover them despite holding the settlors in civil contempt.

In In re Lawrence, 279 F.3d 1274 (11th Cir. 2002), a bankruptcy court used contempt powers against a debtor with offshore trust assets, but the trust assets themselves remained beyond the court’s reach. In In re Rensin, 600 B.R. 870 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 2019), the court reached a more favorable result for the debtor. The full body of Cook Islands trust case law spans three decades and provides a record no other offshore jurisdiction can match.

What Does a Cook Islands Trust Protect Against?

Cook Islands trusts protect against civil judgments, including malpractice verdicts, business liability, personal injury claims, and contract disputes. A U.S. court can order the settlor to repatriate assets, but the trustee, operating under Cook Islands law, will decline to comply. The creditor is left to pursue enforcement in a jurisdiction designed to prevent it.

A Cook Islands trust can also protect against divorce. A U.S. family court can order equitable distribution of marital assets, but it cannot compel a Cook Islands trustee to comply. The trustee operates under Cook Islands law, not U.S. family court jurisdiction, and will not distribute trust assets to satisfy a foreign divorce judgment. Setting up a Cook Islands trust while married requires spousal consent and careful structuring to avoid creating grounds for a fraudulent transfer challenge.

Cook Islands trusts also provide insulation from political and systemic risks. Assets held offshore sit outside any single country’s banking and legal system, insulated from capital controls, bank failures affecting uninsured deposits above the $250,000 FDIC limit, and concentration risk.

Different Roles in a Cook Islands Trust

A Cook Islands trust has four parties: the settlor, the trustee, the beneficiary, and the trust protector.

The settlor creates the trust and transfers assets into it. The trustee is a licensed Cook Islands trust company that holds legal title and administers the trust under Cook Islands law. Every licensed trustee is insured and bonded through the Financial Supervisory Commission. The beneficiaries are entitled to receive distributions, and the settlor is typically the primary beneficiary. A trust protector has the authority to remove and replace the trustee if needed.

The trust deed defines each party’s role, the duress clause and other defensive provisions, and the rules governing trustee conduct.

Common Cook Islands Trust Structure

Most Cook Islands trusts use an LLC holding structure.

The trust owns a Cook Islands LLC, and the LLC holds the bank and brokerage accounts where assets are kept. The settlor is appointed as the LLC’s initial manager, retaining day-to-day control over investments during normal circumstances.

When a legal threat arises, the trustee replaces the settlor as LLC manager and takes control of the assets. This structure gives the settlor practical control when there is no threat and automatic protection when there is one.

Cook Islands trust sample structure

How Do You Set Up a Cook Islands Trust?

Setting up a Cook Islands trust involves four steps:

  1. Select a licensed Cook Islands trust company as the trustee.
  2. Complete the KYC and AML background check that Cook Islands anti-money laundering laws require.
  3. Have the trust deed drafted by a U.S. attorney who structures the defensive provisions, identifies the parties, and coordinates with the trustee.
  4. Fund the trust by transferring assets to the offshore accounts.

The process takes three to eight weeks from engagement to funded trust. The timeline depends mainly on how quickly the settlor gathers documentation and completes the KYC process. The trustee’s KYC package typically includes a notarized passport or driver’s license copy, a bank reference letter, proof of address, documentation of the source of funds, and a sworn affidavit of solvency.

Cook Islands trusts can be established during active litigation. The trust deed includes a Jones clause that authorizes the trustee to pay the specific existing creditor under defined conditions, which mitigates fraudulent transfer exposure and provides a defense against contempt. Post-claim planning carries higher contempt risk and a weaker negotiating position than pre-claim planning, and it is not effective for protecting real estate. Liquid assets remain the strong case for post-claim formations.

How Much Does a Cook Islands Trust Cost?

A Cook Islands trust costs $20,000 to $25,000 to establish, which includes legal fees and first-year trustee fees. Annual maintenance runs $5,000 to $8,000, covering trustee administration, custodial fees at the offshore bank or brokerage, and ongoing coordination between the trustee and the settlor’s advisors.

U.S. tax preparation for the required foreign trust returns adds $2,000 to $3,000 per year. The settlor’s CPA handles these filings, not the attorney or trustee.

The cost structure varies based on asset complexity and the number of entities involved. Situations involving multiple LLCs, real estate, or business interests cost more than a single trust holding a brokerage account. Litigation-related expenses, such as trustee intervention when a creditor files a claim, are additional.

Cook Islands trusts are not cost-effective for everyone. The planning threshold is $1 million in total assets or $500,000 in liquid assets. Below that level, the setup and maintenance costs consume too large a share of the protected assets. People with lower asset levels can often achieve meaningful protection through domestic structures and state exemptions at a fraction of the cost.

Disadvantages of Cook Islands Trusts

Cook Islands trusts require the settlor to give up direct control over assets and to accept that any dispute with the trustee must be resolved under Cook Islands law, not U.S. law. Cook Islands trustee companies are licensed and regulated by the Cook Islands Financial Supervisory Commission, and no trustee has ever misappropriated a settlor’s assets. But the legal recourse for any dispute runs through Cook Islands courts, not U.S. courts.

The structure does not reduce taxes. The IRS treats a Cook Islands trust as a grantor trust, meaning all income, gains, and deductions flow through to the settlor’s personal return. The settlor pays the same taxes as if the assets were held directly. Anyone suggesting otherwise is either mistaken or selling something illegal.

Cook Islands trusts do not eliminate reporting obligations. U.S. persons must file Forms 3520 and 3520-A annually, report foreign financial accounts on the FBAR (FinCEN Form 114), and file Form 8938 when specified foreign financial assets exceed the applicable threshold. The CPA handles these filings, not the attorney. Penalties for non-compliance start at $10,000 per form per year. The compliance obligations are entirely driven by U.S. law and apply each year regardless of whether the trust generates income.

Cook Islands trusts do not make assets invisible. The trust must be disclosed on tax returns, in discovery proceedings, and in response to lawful court inquiries. Attempting to conceal a trust is illegal and counterproductive.

Cook Islands trusts do not guarantee immunity from contempt. A U.S. court can hold the settlor in civil contempt for refusing a repatriation order, even when the trustee independently declines to release assets. The duress clause and impossibility defense mitigate contempt exposure but do not eliminate it. The litigation risks associated with Cook Islands trusts are well-documented through three decades of case law.

Cook Islands trusts are strongest for liquid assets held in offshore accounts. Real estate sitting inside the U.S. is harder to protect because courts can directly control domestic real property through in rem proceedings, regardless of title.

What Can You Fund a Cook Islands Trust With?

Cash and securities are the most straightforward assets to transfer into a Cook Islands trust. The trust’s LLC opens an offshore bank or brokerage account, and assets move by wire transfer. The settlor typically continues managing the investment portfolio through the LLC during normal circumstances.

Real estate cannot be moved offshore. Instead, an LLC that owns the property is assigned to the trust. The land remains within U.S. court jurisdiction, which limits the protection. Courts can directly control domestic real property regardless of who owns the LLC that holds title.

LLC and business interests can be transferred by assigning membership interests to the trust. Settlors who own operating businesses or investment entities commonly place the equity beyond the reach of creditors while retaining management control through the LLC structure.

Cryptocurrency presents unique challenges in custody, valuation, and compliance. The trust can hold digital assets, but custodial arrangements and reporting obligations differ from traditional financial accounts. Each asset type has specific transfer mechanics, documentation requirements, and potential pitfalls. The funding process is where many structures lose their protective value due to errors in titling, account registration, or timing.

Why Choose the Cook Islands Over Other Jurisdictions?

The Cook Islands has the longest track record and the most developed body of case law of any offshore trust jurisdiction. Other jurisdictions have modeled their statutes on Cook Islands law, but no other jurisdiction has three decades of litigation outcomes confirming that the protections hold up when tested.

Nevis has a shorter track record and less litigation history. Belize, the Bahamas, and the Cayman Islands each have trust legislation but lack the Cook Islands’ depth of contested case law and dedicated trustee market. The statutory and practical differences between jurisdictions are substantial.

The Cook Islands operates under regulatory oversight that meets international standards. The Financial Supervisory Commission licenses and audits every trustee company. The Cook Islands Financial Intelligence Unit handles anti-money laundering compliance. The jurisdiction has signed the OECD automatic exchange agreement, appears on no international blacklist or greylist, and cooperates with tax authorities under the Common Reporting Standard. Courts and opposing counsel cannot credibly argue that a Cook Islands trust is inherently fraudulent when the jurisdiction itself is fully compliant with international regulatory norms.

Domestic asset protection trusts operate within the U.S. legal system. They remain subject to Full Faith and Credit, federal bankruptcy jurisdiction under § 548(e)(1) with a 10-year lookback, and U.S. courts that can compel domestic trustees. A Cook Islands trust operates entirely outside that system. DAPTs are better than nothing for residents of DAPT-authorizing states who cannot afford offshore planning, but they are not a substitute for a Cook Islands trust.

Who Needs a Cook Islands Trust?

Cook Islands trusts are built for people whose liability exposure and non-exempt assets are large enough to justify the cost and complexity. The typical candidate is a physician, business owner, real estate developer, or high-net-worth professional with at least $1 million in total assets or $500,000 in liquid assets.

People in professions with elevated litigation risk benefit most because the trust changes the creditor’s math before a lawsuit is filed. A creditor who knows the target’s liquid assets sit in a Cook Islands trust faces a collection process that will take years, cost six figures, and likely fail. That changes whether the lawsuit gets filed at all.

Common Misconceptions

The most common misconception about Cook Islands trusts is that they can be used to hide assets. They cannot.

Every dollar transferred to the trust must be disclosed on federal tax returns, FBAR filings, and in court proceedings. The protection comes from jurisdictional separation: placing assets under a legal system that does not enforce U.S. civil judgments, not from concealment.

Another misconception is that Cook Islands trusts reduce taxes. The IRS treats the trust as a grantor trust. The settlor reports all trust income on their personal return and pays the same taxes as if the assets were held directly.

Finally, Cook Islands trusts are not illegal. The Cook Islands is a self-governing nation associated with New Zealand, regulated by the Financial Supervisory Commission, and fully compliant with OECD financial transparency standards. Every licensed trustee company is audited, insured, and bonded. The common misconceptions about these trusts reflect confusion about what the structure does, not any actual legal problem with the structure itself.

How Is a Cook Islands Trust Managed After Setup?

A Cook Islands trust requires active administration throughout its life. The trustee monitors trust activity, maintains compliance files, and administers the trust under Cook Islands law. The settlor coordinates with a CPA for annual tax filings and with the trustee for any transactions involving trust assets.

The most common administration problems are mundane: delayed filings, informal side agreements between the settlor and the trustee that are never documented, and failure to record the trustee’s decisions properly. These failures gradually weaken the trust’s protection and become apparent only when the structure is tested in litigation. A well-run Cook Islands trust looks boring from the outside. Timely filings, clean records, and documented decisions are what hold up under challenge.

Alper Law has structured offshore and domestic asset protection plans since 1991. Schedule a consultation or call (407) 444-0404.

Gideon Alper

About the Author

Gideon Alper

Gideon Alper focuses on asset protection planning, including Cook Islands trusts, offshore LLCs, and domestic strategies for individuals facing litigation exposure. He previously served as an attorney with the IRS Office of Chief Counsel in the Large Business and International Division. J.D. with honors from Emory University.

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