Collaborative Series Investment Trust N-CSR
Exhibit 99.COE

4.2 Code of Ethics
Statement
of General Principles

This Code
of Ethics has been adopted by Collaborative Investment Series Trust (the “Trust”) for the purpose of instructing all employees,
officers, directors and trustees of the Trust and each adviser to the Trust (the “Adviser”), in their ethical obligations
and to provide rules for their personal securities transactions. All such persons owe a fiduciary duty to the Trust and its shareholders.
A fiduciary duty means a duty of loyalty, fairness and good faith towards the Trust and its shareholders, and the obligation to adhere
not only to the specific provisions of this Code but to the general principles that guide the Code. These general principles are:
| § | The duty at all times
to place the interests of the Trust and its shareholders first; |
| § | The requirement that
all personal securities transactions be conducted in a manner consistent with the Code of
Ethics and in such a manner as to avoid any actual or potential conflict of interest or any
abuse of any individual’s position of trust and responsibility; and |
| § | The fundamental standard
that such employees, officers, directors and trustees should not take inappropriate advantage
of their positions, or of their relationship with the Trust or its shareholders. |
It is
imperative that the personal trading activities of the employees, officers, directors and trustees of the Trust and the Adviser, respectively,
be conducted with the highest regard for these general principles in order to avoid any possible conflict of interest, any appearance
of a conflict, or activities that could lead to disciplinary action. This includes executing transactions through or for the benefit
of a third party when the transaction is not in keeping with the general principles of this Code.
All personal
securities transactions must also comply with the Securities & Exchange Commission’s Rule 17j-1. Under this rule, no Employee
may:
| § | employ
any device, scheme or artifice to defraud the Trust or any of its shareholders; • make
to the Trust or any of its shareholders any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to
state to such client a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light
of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading; • engage in any act,
practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon
the Trust or any of its shareholders; or |
| § | engage in any manipulative
practice with respect to the Trust or any of its shareholders. |

Definitions
| 1. | Advisory Employees: Employees who,
in connection with their regular functions or duties, make, participate in, or obtain information
regarding the purchase or sale of securities by a Fund, or whose functions relate to the
making of any recommendation with respect to purchases or sales. The Compliance Officer will
maintain a current list of all Advisory Employees. |
| 2. | Beneficial Interest:
ownership or any benefits of ownership, including the opportunity to directly or indirectly
profit or otherwise obtain financial benefits from any interest in a security. |
| 3. | Chief Compliance Officer: means
the Chief Compliance Officer of the Trust as may be appointed by the Board of Trustees from
time to time. |
| 4. | Compliance Officer: means, for
Advisory Personnel, the person designated as the Chief Compliance Officer of the Advisor
with which the Advisory Person is affiliated; for Trust Personnel, the Trust’s
Chief Compliance Officer. |
| 5. | Disinterested
Trustees: trustees of the Trust whose affiliation with the Trust is solely by reason
of being a trustee of the Trust. |
| 6. | Employee Account: each account
in which an Employee or a member of his or her family has any direct or indirect Beneficial
Interest or over which such person exercises control or influence, other than through the
exercise of investment discretion, including, but not limited to, any joint account, partnership,
corporation, trust or estate. An Employee’s family members include the Employee’s
spouse, minor children, any person living in the home of the Employee and any relative of
the Employee (including in-laws) to whose support an Employee directly or indirectly contributes. |
| 7. | Employees: the employees, officers,
and trustees of the Trust and the employees, officers and directors of the Adviser, including
Advisory Employees. The Compliance Officer will maintain a current list of all Employees. |
| 8. | Exempt Transactions: transactions
which are 1) effected in an amount or in a manner over which the Employee has no direct or
indirect influence or control, 2) pursuant to a systematic dividend reinvestment plan, systematic
cash purchase plan or systematic withdrawal plan, 3) in connection with the exercise or sale
of rights to purchase additional securities from an issuer and granted by such issuer pro-rata
to all holders of a class of its securities, 4) in connection with the call by the issuer
of a preferred stock or bond, 5) pursuant to the exercise by a second party of a put or call
option, 6) closing transactions no more than five business days prior to the expiration of
a related put or call option, 7) inconsequential to any Fund because the transaction is very
unlikely to affect a highly liquid market or because the security is clearly not related
economically to any securities that a Fund may purchase or sell, 8) involving shares of a
security of a company with a market capitalization in excess of $500 million. |
| 9. | Fund(s): means each series of the Trust. |
| 10. | Personal Securities
Transactions: means transactions in Securities for the account(s) in the names of Trust
Personnel, or for the accounts in which Trust Personnel have Beneficial Ownership. |
| 11. | Related Securities: securities
issued by the same issuer or issuer under common control, or when either security gives the
holder any contractual rights with respect to the other security, including options, warrants
or other convertible securities. |
| 12. | Securities: any note, stock, treasury
stock, bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest or participation
in any profit-sharing agreement, collateral-trust certificate, pre- organization certificate
or subscription, transferable share, investment contract, voting-trust certificate, certificate
of deposit for a security, fractional undivided interest in oil, gas or other mineral rights,
or, in general, any interest or instrument commonly known as a “security,” or
any certificate or interest or participation in temporary or interim certificate for, receipt
for, guarantee of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase (including options) any
of the foregoing; except for the following: 1) securities issued by the government of the
United States, 2) bankers’ acceptances, 3) bank certificates of deposit, 4) commercial
paper, and 5) shares of unaffiliated registered open-end investment companies (other than
exchange traded funds). |
| 13. | Securities Transaction: the purchase
or sale, or any action to accomplish the purchase or sale, of a Security for an Employee
Account. The term Securities Transaction does not include transactions executed by the Adviser
for the benefit of unaffiliated persons, such as investment advisory and brokerage clients. |

Personal Investment Guidelines
| a) | The
Personal Investment Guidelines in this Section III do not apply to Exempt Transactions unless
the transaction involves a private placement or initial public offering. Employees must remember
that regardless of the transaction’s status as exempt or not exempt, the Employee’s
fiduciary obligations remain unchanged. |
| b) | While
trustees of the Trust are subject at all times to the fiduciary obligations described in
this Code, the Personal Investment Guidelines and Compliance Procedures in Sections III and
IV of this Code apply to Disinterested Trustees only if such person knew, or in the ordinary
course of fulfilling the duties of that position, should have known, that during the fifteen
days immediately preceding or after the date of the such person’s transaction that
the same Security or a Related Security was or was to be purchased or sold for a Fund or
that such purchase or sale for a Fund was being considered, in which case such Sections apply
only to such transaction. |
| c) | Employees
may not execute a Securities Transaction on a day during which a purchase or sell order in
that same Security or a Related Security is pending for a Fund unless the Securities Transaction
is combined (“blocked”) with the Fund’s transaction. Securities Transactions
executed in violation of this prohibition shall be unwound or, if not possible or practical,
the Employee must disgorge to the Fund the value received by the Employee due to any favorable
price differential received by the Employee. For example, if the Employee buys 100 shares
at $10 per share, and the Fund buys 1000 shares at $11 per share, the Employee will pay $100
(100 shares x $1 differential) to the Fund. |
| d) | Any
Securities Transactions in a private placement must be authorized by the Compliance Officer,
in writing, prior to the transaction. In connection with a private placement acquisition,
the Compliance Officer will take into account, among other factors, whether the investment
opportunity should be reserved for a Fund, and whether the opportunity is being offered to
the Employee by virtue of the Employee’s position with the Trust or the Adviser. If
the private placement acquisition is authorized, the Compliance Officer shall retain a record
of the authorization and the rationale supporting the authorization. Employees who have been
authorized to acquire securities in a private placement will, in connection therewith, be
required to disclose that investment if and when the Employee takes part in any subsequent
investment in the same issuer. In such circumstances, the determination to purchase Securities
of that issuer on behalf of a Fund will be subject to an independent review by personnel
of the Adviser with no personal interest in the issuer. |
| e) | Employees
are prohibited from acquiring any Securities in an initial public offering without the prior
written approval of the Compliance Officer. This restriction is imposed in order to preclude
any possibility of an Employee profiting improperly from the Employee’s position with
the Trust or the Adviser. If the initial public offering is authorized, the Compliance Officer
shall retain a record of the authorization and the rationale supporting the authorization. |
| 2. | Other Restrictions Employees are prohibited from serving on the boards
of directors of publicly traded
companies, absent prior authorization by the Compliance Officer. The consideration of prior authorization will be based upon a determination
that the board service will be consistent with the interests of the Trust and the Funds’ shareholders. In the event that board
service is 32 authorized, Employees serving as directors will be isolated from other Employees making investment decisions with respect
to the securities of the company in question. |

Compliance Procedures
| a) | Within
ten (10) days of commencement of employment with the Trust or the Adviser, each Employee
must certify that he or she has read and understands this Code and recognizes that he or
she is subject to it, and must disclose the following information, which information must
be current as of a date no more than 45 days prior to the date the person became an Employee:
a) the title, number of shares and principal amount of each Security in which the Employee
has a Beneficial Interest when the person became an Employee, b) the name of any broker/dealer
with whom the Employee maintained an account when the person became an Employee, and c) the
date the report is submitted. |
| b) | Annually,
each Employee must certify that he or she has read and understands this Code and recognizes
that he or she is subject to it, that he or she has complied with the requirements of this
Code and has disclosed or reported all personal Securities Transactions required to be disclosed
or reported pursuant to the requirements of this Code. In addition, each Employee shall annually
provide the following information (as of a date no more than 30 days before the report is
submitted): a) the title, number of shares and principal amount of each Security in which
the Employee had any Beneficial Interest, b) the name of any broker, dealer or bank with
whom the Employee maintains an account in which any Securities are held for the direct or
indirect benefit of the Employee, and c) the date the report is submitted. |
| i) | All Employees must provide copies of
all periodic broker account statements to the Compliance Officer. Each Employee must report,
no later than thirty (30) days after the close of each calendar quarter, on the Securities
Transaction Report form provided by the Trust or the Adviser, all transactions in which the
Employee acquired or sold any direct or indirect Beneficial Interest in a Security, including
Exempt Transactions, and certify that he or she has reported all transactions required to
be disclosed pursuant to the requirements of this Code. The report will also identify any
trading account, in which the Employee has a direct or indirect Beneficial Interest, established
during the quarter with a broker, dealer or bank. The Employee may exclude transactions effected
pursuant to an automatic investment plan. An automatic investment plan is a program in which
regular periodic purchases (or withdrawals) are made automatically in (or from) investment
accounts in accordance with a predetermined schedule and allocation. An automatic investment
plan includes a dividend reinvestment plan. |
| ii) | The Compliance Officer will, on a quarterly
basis, check the trading account statements provided by brokers to verify that the Employee
has not violated the Code. The Compliance Officer shall identify all Employees, inform those
persons of their reporting obligations, and maintain a record of all current and former access persons. |
| iii) | If an Employee violates this Code,
the Compliance Officer will report the violation to management personnel of the Trust and
the Adviser for appropriate remedial action which, in addition to the actions specifically
delineated in other sections of this Code, may include a reprimand of the Employee, or suspension
or termination of the Employee’s relationship with the Trust and/or the Adviser. |
| iv) | The management personnel of the Trust
will prepare an annual report to the Trust’s board of trustees that summarizes existing
procedures and any changes in the procedures made during the past year and certify to the
Trust’s Board of Trustees that the Adviser and the Trust have each adopted procedures
reasonably necessary to prevent Employees from violating this Code. The report will describe
any issues existing under this Code since the last report, including without limitation,
information about any material violations of this Code, any significant remedial action during
the past year and any recommended procedural or substantive changes to this Code based on
management’s experience under this Code, evolving industry practices or legal developments. |
Responsible Party/Compliance Process: Chief
Compliance Officer/Investment Adviser
Approved: [date]
Revised: [date]