UK School Classroom

26 Mar 2026

Conflicts of interest: What an academy trustee should do

News & insights

Being the trustee of an academy trust carries the responsibility to act in others’ best interests. This includes responding in the right way to conflicts of interest.

What is a conflict of interest?

A conflict of interest arises where a trustee’s personal, professional, or family interests could influence their decision-making in relation to the trust. This deliberately broad definition includes actual, potential, or perceived conflicts, and financial or non-financial interests.

A trustee who fails to identify or manage a conflict of interest properly may:

  • Breach charity law and company director duties
  • Undermine the validity of board decisions
  • Contribute to audit or regulatory findings
  • Expose themselves and the trust to reputational risk

Managing conflicts correctly is therefore a core governance responsibility, not a procedural formality.

Read on for our step-by-step guide, from identifying the conflict to keeping it under review.

1. Recognise that a conflict exists or may exist

When unsure, trustees should err on the side of disclosure rather than omission.

2. Declare the conflict promptly and fully

This involves:

  • Declaring the interest to the Chair and the board of trustees
  • Ensuring the interest is recorded in the register of interests
  • Making a specific declaration at the relevant meeting, even if the interest is already on the register

Declarations should be clear and specific, explaining the nature of the interest, who or what it relates to, and how it connects to the matter being discussed.

3. Withdraw from discussion and decision-making

Where a conflict exists, the trustee must:

  • Not participate in any discussion of the matter
  • Not influence other trustees formally or informally
  • Not vote on the decision

In most cases, the trustee should also physically or virtually leave the meeting for that agenda item. This protects the integrity of the decision and protects the trustee personally by demonstrating proper conduct.

4. Ensure the conflict is properly minuted

The board must ensure that:

  • The declaration of interest is recorded in the minutes
  • The trustee’s withdrawal from discussion and decision-making is clearly noted
  • The decision is shown to have been taken only by non-conflicted trustees

Minutes should demonstrate that the board recognised the conflict, actively managed it, and reached the decision independently.

5. Allow the board to assess and manage the conflict

After the trustee steps aside, the remaining trustees must decide how to proceed.

This usually includes:

  • Considering whether the transaction or decision is in the trust’s best interests, necessary, and represents value for money
  • Considering alternatives (e.g. other suppliers or options)
  • Applying additional scrutiny where public funds are involved

The conflicted trustee must not be involved in this assessment.

6. Follow additional requirements for related party transactions (if applicable)

If the conflict relates to a related party transaction (for example, a contract with a trustee-connected company), trustees must also ensure that:

  • The transaction is at cost (no profit)
  • Reporting and approval requirements from the DfE (Department for Education) are met in advance
  • The transaction is fully disclosed in the annual accounts

Failure to manage conflicts properly in this context can lead to regularity breaches, regulatory intervention and reputational damage.

7. Keep the conflict under review

Conflicts are not always one-off events. Trustees should:

  • Update their declaration if circumstances change
  • Redeclare the conflict if the issue arises again
  • Ensure the register of interests remains accurate and up to date

Summary: the trustee’s golden rules

When a conflict of interest is identified, a trustee should:

  • Declare it early
  • Record it clearly
  • Step away completely
  • Let independent trustees decide
  • Ensure transparency throughout

Handled properly, conflicts do not prevent trustees from serving effectively; failing to manage them does.

Frequently Asked Questions: Conflicts of interest for trustees

What causes a conflict of interest?

It arises when a trustee’s personal, professional or family interests could (appear to) influence trust decisions. This includes financial and non‑financial interests, actual or potential.

Why do they matter?

Unmanaged conflicts can breach charity/company law, weaken board decisions, attract regulatory scrutiny and harm reputations.

How should trustees respond to an actual or possible conflict of interest?

  • Tell the Chair and board
  • Add it to the register of interests
  • Declare it again at any meeting where it’s relevant
  • Explain clearly what the interest is and how it relates to the issue
  • Do not join discussions, influence the decision, or vote. In most cases, leave the meeting (physically or virtually) for that item

How should it be recorded?

To prove that the board handled the conflict properly, minutes should show:

  • The trustee’s declaration
  • That they left the discussion
  • That only non‑conflicted trustees made the decision

The trustee should update the declaration if anything changes. Redeclare the conflict if it comes up again. Keep the register accurate.

What do non-conflicted trustees do next?

They decide independently, considering alternatives, value for money and whether the decision is in the trust’s best interests.

What if it involves a related party transaction (RPT)?

Poor handling can lead to regulatory action, so extra rules apply:

  • Must be at cost (no profit)
  • DfE reporting/approval may be required beforehand
  • Must be fully disclosed in the accounts

Read more about academy trusts and related party transactions

 

How BKL can help

Our specialist education sector team have more than 25 years’ experience of providing advice to over 100 schools and academies, including single academy trusts (SATs) and multi academy trusts (MATs) across the UK.

We can ensure that you and your fellow academy trustees have a confident understanding of your responsibilities, including how to protect yourself and the trust when conflicts of interest arise.

Contact Carly Pinkus or send us an enquiry.

Carly Pinkus

Head of Academies and Schools, BKL

Carly’s profile