Winding up an SMSF means closing the fund permanently: rolling members out to other super funds, disposing of all assets, preparing final financial statements and a tax return, obtaining a final audit, notifying the ATO, and, if the fund has a corporate trustee, deregistering the company with ASIC. Once wound up, the fund ceases to exist and is removed from the ATO’s Super Fund Lookup register. Expect 3–6 months for a clean wind-up. Funds holding property or with unresolved tax matters take longer.
SMSFcentral runs the full wind-up process so that every legal obligation is met before the fund closes.
What’s Included
- Member rollover processing to nominated receiving funds (APRA-regulated or other SMSF)
- Asset disposal coordination (shares, managed funds, term deposits, cash)
- Property sale or in-specie transfer management
- Final financial statements preparation
- Final income tax return (fund’s last year of operation)
- Appointment and coordination of the final audit
- ATO notification of fund wind-up and ABN cancellation
- Super Fund Lookup deregistration
- ASIC deregistration of corporate trustee (if applicable, additional fee)
- TFN and ABN cancellation
- Completion pack with all final documents
Price: Contact SMSFcentral for a quote. Fees vary depending on asset complexity, outstanding tax matters and whether a corporate trustee needs deregistering.
Our Process
- Pre-wind-up review. We assess the fund’s current position: member balances, asset holdings, outstanding pensions, pending tax lodgements and any compliance issues that need resolving before closure. We confirm the trust deed permits the trustee to wind up the fund and identify the required procedure.
- Member rollover. Each member’s benefit is rolled over to their nominated receiving fund. We process the rollover via SuperStream and report the tax components (taxable and tax-free) correctly. Members must nominate a receiving fund before this step can proceed.
- Pension commutation. Any pensions in payment must be formally commuted (converted back to accumulation phase) before the member benefit can be rolled out. We prepare the commutation documentation and report the commutation to the ATO via the transfer balance account report (TBAR).
- Asset disposal. All fund assets must be converted to cash or transferred out before the fund can close. For shares and managed funds, we assist with the paperwork and administration. For property, we work with the trustee and their adviser to manage the administrative side of the sale process. In-specie transfers (transferring assets directly to a member’s new fund) are possible for listed securities but require careful CGT and stamp duty analysis.
- Final accounts and tax return. We prepare the fund’s final financial statements covering the period from 1 July to the wind-up date. The final SMSF annual return includes income, deductions, CGT events from asset disposals and the final member statement. Any tax payable must be settled before the ATO will process the fund’s closure.
- Final audit. An independent SMSF auditor conducts the final audit covering both the financial statements and SIS compliance. The audit must be completed before the final return is lodged.
- ATO notification. We lodge the final SMSF annual return with the wind-up indicator. This triggers the ATO to update the fund’s status on Super Fund Lookup to “wound up.” We also cancel the fund’s ABN and TFN.
- Corporate trustee deregistration (if applicable). If the fund used a corporate trustee that was established solely for the SMSF, we apply to ASIC to deregister the company. This avoids ongoing annual review fees. Deregistration takes approximately 2–3 months after the ASIC application.
- Completion. You receive a finalised pack containing all wind-up documentation, final financial statements, the auditor’s report, ATO lodgement confirmations and ASIC deregistration confirmation.
GST note: If the fund is registered for GST (common for funds holding commercial property), we cancel the GST registration with the ATO as part of the wind-up process. A final BAS must be lodged covering the period up to the GST cancellation date.
Regulatory Context
The SIS Act does not prescribe a single wind-up procedure, but several sections govern the process:
Section 17A (Fund registration). An SMSF must meet the definition requirements to remain registered. Once the fund has no members and no assets, it should be wound up and deregistered to avoid ongoing obligations.
Section 35B (Annual return). A final annual return must be lodged even in the year of wind-up. The return covers the period from 1 July to the date of wind-up.
Section 71E (In-house assets). Any in-house asset issues must be resolved before wind-up. In-house assets above 5% of the fund’s total assets are a contravention that auditors will report.
Regulation 6.17 (Notification). Trustees must notify the ATO of the wind-up within 28 days. In practice, this is done via the final return.
Transfer balance cap reporting. Commutation of pensions during wind-up must be reported to the ATO within 28 days via TBAR.
For corporate trustees, the Corporations Act 2001 governs deregistration. ASIC requires that the company has no outstanding debts, is not a party to legal proceedings and has lodged all required documents before it can be deregistered.
Common Complications
Real property is the main reason wind-ups stall. The property must be sold or transferred before the fund can close, and sale timelines are unpredictable. If the property has a limited recourse borrowing arrangement, the loan must be fully repaid or discharged first. Allow extra time. Property-related wind-ups regularly take 6–12 months.
The ATO will not process a wind-up if the fund has overdue annual returns or unpaid tax. Back-year returns must be lodged and any resulting tax paid before the final return can be accepted. If the fund has several years of unfiled returns, the accounting work alone can add months.
Pensions in payment cannot simply be stopped. They must be formally commuted with proper documentation. The commutation must be reported to the ATO and the member’s transfer balance account must be updated. Skipping this step creates reporting gaps that the ATO’s automated systems will flag.
Every dollar in the SMSF must go somewhere. If a member will not nominate a receiving super fund, the rollover cannot be processed and the entire wind-up stalls. Unclaimed money rules may eventually apply, but that path is slow and expensive.
Frequently Asked Questions
The most common reasons: the cost of running the fund outweighs the benefits (typically when balances fall below $250,000–$400,000), the members no longer want the administrative responsibility, all benefits have been paid out, or members are consolidating into an APRA-regulated fund after retirement.
A clean wind-up (cash and listed shares only, all returns up to date) takes 3–4 months. Funds with property, outstanding tax matters or pensions in payment should allow 6–12 months.
Yes, but the property must be sold or transferred first. It cannot remain in a wound-up fund. If the property is subject to a limited recourse borrowing arrangement, the loan must be discharged before the property can be sold or transferred. This often adds time and cost.
Yes. The SIS Act requires an annual audit for every year the fund exists, including its final year. The auditor reviews the final financial statements and confirms that the wind-up process complied with the SIS Act and the fund’s trust deed.
If the company was set up solely to act as trustee of the SMSF, it should be deregistered with ASIC after the fund closes. Otherwise, it will continue to incur the annual ASIC review fee (currently $67/year for special purpose companies) and ongoing reporting obligations. SMSFcentral can handle the ASIC deregistration as part of the wind-up.
Potentially, yes. Disposing of assets triggers capital gains tax events. The fund’s final tax return captures all income and gains for the final period. Any tax payable is settled from the fund’s remaining cash before the final member benefits are rolled out.
Related Solutions
- SMSF Pension Setup and Management: pension commutation must occur before benefits can be rolled out
- SMSF Trustee Changes: trustee obligations during and after wind-up
- SMSF Trust Deed Updates: confirm the deed permits the trustee to wind up the fund
Close the Fund Properly
Call 02 8412 0086 or email [email protected]. We will review the fund’s position and give you a clear timeline for closure.
Final ASIC minutes and forms.
Deregistration of Security Trustee and Corporate Trustee companies.
Notifying the ATO.
Closing of bank accounts.
Facilitation of rollovers.
Final Tax Returns, Financial Statements and Minutes.