What SMSF Accountants in Sydney Want You to Ask First

• June 9, 2026

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A self-managed super fund can give you more control over your retirement savings, but it also comes with serious responsibilities. Many people begin the SMSF journey by asking, “How do I set one up?” or “Can I buy property through my super?”

Those are useful questions, but they are not always the first questions an experienced SMSF accountant wants you to ask.

Before setting up or reviewing a self-managed super fund, the better question is: “Is an SMSF actually suitable for my goals, capacity, and responsibilities?”

That question matters because SMSFs are not simply investment accounts. They are regulated superannuation structures with legal, tax, accounting, audit, and trustee obligations. If managed well, an SMSF can support long-term retirement planning. If managed poorly, it can create compliance issues, unnecessary costs, poor investment decisions, and risk to retirement savings.

The Australian Taxation Office explains that SMSF trustees are responsible for running the fund and complying with super and tax laws, even if they use professional advisers. This means trustees cannot fully outsource responsibility, even when they work with an accountant, administrator, or auditor.

Recent ASIC findings also reinforce why SMSF decisions need careful upfront questioning. ASIC’s 2025 review of SMSF establishment advice found concerns in a significant number of advice files, including failures to demonstrate compliance with best interests obligations and cases involving potential client detriment. This is a reminder that SMSFs can be powerful, but they are not suitable for everyone.

At W Advisory, we help clients approach tax, compliance, and accounting decisions with clarity. W Advisory provides tax compliance services for businesses, companies, trusts, and SMSFs, with a focus on accurate lodgements, proactive compliance, and practical advice for clients across Sydney and NSW.

This guide explains the questions Sydney SMSF accountants want you to ask first, before you set up, restructure, or continue managing a self-managed super fund.

What Is an SMSF?

An SMSF, or self-managed super fund, is a private superannuation fund that you manage yourself, usually with up to six members. Members are generally also trustees or directors of the corporate trustee, which means they are responsible for decisions made by the fund.

An SMSF can give members greater control over investment choices, tax planning, estate planning, and retirement strategy. However, that control comes with legal responsibility.

An SMSF may be used to invest in assets such as:

  • Australian shares
  • Managed funds
  • Term deposits and cash
  • Commercial property
  • Residential property, subject to strict rules
  • Exchange-traded funds
  • Business real property
  • Certain collectables, subject to rules
  • Some private investments, where allowed
  • Other assets permitted by superannuation law and the fund’s investment strategy

However, every investment must meet SMSF rules, including the sole purpose test, investment strategy requirements, related-party rules, borrowing restrictions, and market valuation obligations.

This is why an SMSF accountant is not only preparing tax documents. A good SMSF accountant helps you understand compliance, timing, records, tax consequences, and reporting obligations.

Why the Right Questions Matter Before Setting Up an SMSF

Many SMSF problems begin before the fund is even established.

People may set up an SMSF because they want to buy property, reduce tax, invest directly, control their super, or follow a recommendation from a friend, adviser, or online article. But these reasons need to be tested carefully.

An SMSF may not be suitable if:

  • Your super balance is too low to justify the costs
  • You do not want trustee responsibility
  • You do not have time to keep records
  • You are not comfortable making investment decisions
  • You have not considered insurance needs
  • You do not understand related-party rules
  • You want to access super early
  • You are relying on aggressive tax assumptions
  • You have not planned for death, incapacity, or divorce
  • You are setting it up only because someone recommended property investment

SMSFs work best when they are matched to clear goals, proper advice, accurate records, and strong compliance systems.

Before setting one up, Sydney clients should speak with a qualified SMSF accountant, licensed financial adviser, and, where needed, a solicitor.

Question 1: Is an SMSF Suitable for My Retirement Goals?

This is the first question SMSF accountants want you to ask.

An SMSF should not be set up only because it sounds flexible or tax-effective. It should support your retirement strategy.

Ask yourself:

  • What do I want my super to achieve?
  • Do I want more investment control?
  • Am I comfortable making trustee decisions?
  • Is my balance large enough to justify costs?
  • Do I need professional investment advice?
  • Do I understand SMSF risks?
  • Would an industry or retail super fund be simpler?
  • How will the SMSF support retirement income later?

An SMSF may suit people who want control, have sufficient super savings, understand long-term investing, and are willing to take responsibility for compliance.

It may not suit people who want a simple, low-maintenance super option.

A good SMSF accountant should not simply say “yes” to every setup request. They should help you think through suitability, costs, administration, compliance, and long-term planning.

Question 2: Do I Understand My Trustee Responsibilities?

SMSF trustees are legally responsible for the fund.

Even if you hire an accountant, auditor, administrator, or adviser, the trustee remains responsible for making sure the SMSF complies with superannuation and tax law.

Key trustee responsibilities include:

  • Acting in the best financial interests of members
  • Keeping fund assets separate from personal assets
  • Preparing and following an investment strategy
  • Keeping proper records
  • Lodging annual returns
  • Arranging an independent SMSF audit
  • Valuing assets at market value
  • Accepting only allowed contributions
  • Paying benefits only when legally permitted
  • Avoiding early access schemes
  • Complying with borrowing and related-party rules

This responsibility should not be taken lightly. SMSF trustees may face penalties for breaches, even where the mistake was accidental.

For this reason, SMSF accountants want clients to ask: “What am I personally responsible for, and what will my accountant handle?”

That distinction needs to be clear from the beginning.

Question 3: What Will the SMSF Actually Cost to Run?

SMSFs involve ongoing costs. These may include accounting, tax return preparation, independent audit, actuarial certificates, investment fees, legal documents, advice fees, ASIC fees for corporate trustees, and administration software.

Costs vary depending on the complexity of the fund.

A simple SMSF holding listed shares and cash may cost less to manage than a fund holding property, limited recourse borrowing arrangements, related-party leases, pensions, or complex investments.

Before setting up an SMSF, ask:

  • What are the setup costs?
  • What are the annual accounting fees?
  • What does the audit cost?
  • Are there additional fees for pensions?
  • What if the fund owns property?
  • What if the fund borrows?
  • What advice costs should I expect?
  • Are bookkeeping or administration fees separate?
  • Is a corporate trustee recommended?
  • What happens if compliance issues arise?

A low-cost setup may become expensive later if the fund is poorly structured. It is better to understand costs up front.

Question 4: How Will My SMSF Stay Compliant?

SMSF compliance is one of the most important reasons to work with an experienced accountant.

Compliance is not only about lodging a tax return once a year. It involves ongoing records, trustee decisions, transaction tracking, contribution monitoring, investment documentation, and annual audit readiness.

The ATO has highlighted SMSF auditor compliance focus areas, including market valuations. SMSF auditors are expected to verify and retain sufficient audit evidence to support asset values, and the ATO has paid particular attention to funds reporting unchanged asset values across multiple years.

For SMSF trustees, this means valuations must be taken seriously, especially where the fund holds property, unlisted assets, private investments, or related-party arrangements.

Good SMSF compliance should include:

  • Accurate annual financial statements
  • SMSF annual return preparation
  • Independent audit coordination
  • Contribution tracking
  • Pension payment monitoring
  • Market value evidence
  • Investment strategy review
  • Trustee minute preparation
  • Record keeping support
  • Tax planning before 30 June
  • Alerts for deadlines and cap issues

A strong SMSF accountant helps reduce surprises at tax time and audit time.

Question 5: What Can My SMSF Invest In?

SMSFs offer investment control, but that does not mean trustees can invest in anything they like.

Every investment must be allowed under superannuation law, the fund trust deed, and the fund’s investment strategy. It must also satisfy the sole purpose test, which means the fund must be maintained to provide retirement benefits to members or their dependents.

Common SMSF investments may include:

  • Listed shares
  • ETFs
  • Managed funds
  • Cash and term deposits
  • Commercial property
  • Residential property, with restrictions
  • Business real property
  • Some private investments
  • Certain collectables, subject to strict rules

Before investing, ask:

  • Is the investment allowed under SMSF rules?
  • Is it consistent with the fund’s investment strategy?
  • Does it involve a related party?
  • Is market value evidence available?
  • Is the asset sufficiently diversified?
  • Does the fund have enough liquidity?
  • Can the investment be audited?
  • Could it breach borrowing or in-house asset rules?
  • Is insurance considered for members?

SMSF accountants want clients to ask these questions before the investment is made, not after.

Question 6: How Will Contributions, Pensions and Tax Be Managed?

SMSF tax planning is highly dependent on timing, caps, and member balances.

For the 2025–26 year, contribution caps remain an important planning issue. The ATO sets rules for what contributions an SMSF can accept, and trustees need to understand age-based rules, contribution types, and eligibility before accepting amounts into the fund.

Key contribution types include:

  • Concessional contributions
  • Non-concessional contributions
  • Employer contributions
  • Personal deductible contributions
  • Downsizer contributions
  • Spouse contributions
  • Rollovers from other super funds

SMSF accountants also monitor issues such as:

  • Contribution caps
  • Carry-forward concessional contributions
  • Bring-forward non-concessional rules
  • Total super balance
  • Division 293 tax
  • Transfer balance cap
  • Pension minimums
  • Exempt current pension income
  • Taxable and tax-free components
  • Death benefit planning

Contribution mistakes can be costly. Pension mistakes can affect tax outcomes. Poor records can create audit and compliance issues.

That is why SMSF accountants want clients to ask: “What should we plan before 30 June, and what should we review throughout the year?”

Question 7: What Happens If My Circumstances Change?

SMSFs need to be planned for real life.

A fund that works well today may become difficult if members separate, lose capacity, pass away, move overseas, enter aged care, retire, sell a business, or lose interest in managing investments.

Before setting up or continuing with an SMSF, ask:

  • What happens if one trustee dies?
  • What happens if I lose mental capacity?
  • Do I need an enduring power of attorney?
  • Should the fund have a corporate trustee?
  • Is the trust deed up to date?
  • Are the binding death benefit nominations current?
  • What happens if members separate or divorce?
  • What if I move overseas?
  • What if I no longer want to manage the fund?
  • How would the SMSF be wound up?

These are not always comfortable questions, but they are essential.

A good SMSF accountant can work alongside lawyers and financial advisers to make sure the fund is structured for long-term control, succession, and compliance.

How W Advisory Can Help

W Advisory supports clients with accounting, tax compliance, and advisory services across Sydney and NSW. The firm works with individuals, businesses, companies, trusts, and SMSFs, helping clients stay compliant with ATO requirements and improve confidence around tax and reporting obligations.

For SMSF clients, W Advisory can assist with:

  • SMSF accounting
  • SMSF tax return preparation
  • SMSF compliance support
  • Contribution tracking
  • Pension reporting support
  • Trustee record keeping
  • Annual financial statements
  • Audit preparation and coordination
  • Tax planning conversations
  • Support for SMSFs with property or business structures
  • Liaison with advisers where needed

W Advisory’s tax compliance service is positioned around accurate, proactive lodgements and helping clients meet ATO obligations without unnecessary stress.

The goal is to help SMSF trustees understand what needs to be done, when it needs to be done, and what questions should be asked before decisions are made.

Practical Checklist: What to Ask an SMSF Accountant First

Before setting up or reviewing an SMSF, ask:

  • Is an SMSF suitable for my retirement goals?
  • What trustee responsibilities will I personally carry?
  • What will the SMSF cost to set up and run each year?
  • What records do I need to keep?
  • How will the fund’s investments be valued?
  • What investments are allowed?
  • What contributions can the fund accept?
  • How will pensions be managed?
  • Does the fund need a corporate trustee?
  • How will the annual audit be handled?
  • What happens if a member dies or loses capacity?
  • How does the SMSF fit with my estate plan?
  • What advice do I need from a licensed financial adviser?
  • What should we review before 30 June?

The earlier these questions are asked, the easier it is to avoid mistakes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does an SMSF accountant do?

An SMSF accountant helps prepare financial statements, SMSF tax returns, compliance records, and audit documents. They may also assist with contribution tracking, pension reporting, and tax planning support.

Do I need an SMSF accountant in Sydney?

You are not legally required to use an SMSF accountant, but many trustees do because SMSF rules are complex. A Sydney SMSF accountant can help with compliance, tax reporting, and local professional support.

What should I ask before setting up an SMSF?

Ask whether an SMSF is suitable for your goals, what it will cost, what your trustee responsibilities are, what investments are allowed, and how compliance will be managed each year.

Can an SMSF buy property?

An SMSF can buy property if it complies with superannuation law, the fund’s investment strategy, borrowing rules, and related-party restrictions. Property investment through an SMSF should be reviewed carefully before proceeding.

What happens if an SMSF makes a compliance mistake?

Compliance mistakes may lead to penalties, audit issues, additional tax, or ATO action. The outcome depends on the breach. Trustees should seek professional help quickly if an error occurs.

How can W Advisory help with SMSFs?

W Advisory can assist with SMSF accounting, tax returns, compliance support, audit preparation, contribution tracking, and proactive tax compliance guidance for SMSF trustees.

Final Thoughts

SMSFs can offer control, flexibility, and long-term planning opportunities, but they are not a set-and-forget super option. They require time, records, compliance, investment discipline, and professional support.

The most important SMSF questions are not only about setup. They are about suitability, responsibility, cost, compliance, investments, contributions, and what happens when life changes.

For Sydney trustees and prospective SMSF members, asking the right questions early can prevent costly mistakes later.

At W Advisory, we help clients approach SMSF accounting and tax compliance with clarity and confidence. If you are considering setting up an SMSF or want to review your current fund, our team can help you understand your obligations and prepare for better long-term outcomes.

Contact W Advisory today to discuss SMSF accounting, compliance, and tax support for your retirement planning needs.

Disclaimer

This guide provides general information only and does not constitute financial, tax, legal, or superannuation advice. SMSF rules, contribution caps, tax laws, and compliance obligations may change. Trustees remain responsible for their SMSF decisions and should seek advice from a qualified accountant, licensed financial adviser, solicitor, or tax professional before acting.

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