Using Life Insurance as an Estate Planning Tool
Life insurance can be a powerful asset in estate planning, especially for clients concerned about estate and inheritance taxes. As an advisor, here’s how you can guide clients to use life insurance strategically to protect and efficiently transfer their wealth:
Life insurance can serve as both a liquidity tool and a tax-efficient vehicle for transferring wealth. Since estate and inheritance taxes are often due shortly after a client's passing, a life insurance policy can provide the necessary funds for heirs to cover these taxes without needing to sell other valuable assets. Here’s how life insurance can support clients’ estate planning needs:
Liquidity for Estate Taxes and Expenses
When estate taxes are due, heirs may face a substantial tax bill within nine months of the client’s death. Life insurance proceeds, which typically avoid probate, can quickly provide cash to cover estate taxes, legal fees, and other estate-related expenses without needing to liquidate real estate, family businesses, or other valuable assets.
Wealth Transfer and Tax Advantages
If structured correctly, life insurance death benefits are generally income-tax-free to beneficiaries. Additionally, if the policy is held in an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT), the proceeds can be kept outside the estate for federal estate tax purposes, effectively shielding them from both estate and inheritance taxes. This allows more of the client’s assets to pass directly to heirs.
Equalizing Inheritance for Beneficiaries
For clients with diverse asset portfolios, life insurance can help ensure an equitable distribution among heirs. For example, if one heir inherits a family business or real estate, a life insurance policy can provide a comparable cash benefit to other beneficiaries, allowing for a fair distribution without needing to divide or sell complex assets.
Here are some ways advisors can help clients structure life insurance for maximum impact in their estate plans:
Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs): An ILIT is designed to own the life insurance policy, so the proceeds are excluded from the client's taxable estate. This setup can shield the policy's value from estate taxes, while providing liquidity directly to the trust's beneficiaries.
Survivorship Life Insurance: Also known as second-to-die life insurance, this policy pays out only after both spouses have passed away, making it an effective solution for covering estate taxes on large estates. With this type of policy, clients can take advantage of lower premiums compared to individual policies, as well as greater long-term planning flexibility.
Using Life Insurance for Charitable Bequests: Clients who wish to leave a legacy to charitable organizations can designate life insurance proceeds for this purpose. Not only can this help fulfill their philanthropic goals, but it may also offer income tax benefits if the premiums were paid while they were alive.
As an advisor, here are critical points to discuss with clients when integrating life insurance into their estate plans:
Policy Ownership: If a client owns their own life insurance policy, the death benefit will be included in their taxable estate, which could result in estate tax liability. Ownership by an ILIT or other third-party entity can help avoid this.
Premium Payments: For policies owned by an ILIT, premium payments need to be made carefully to avoid gift tax consequences. Advisors can guide clients in setting up annual exclusion gifts to the trust beneficiaries, allowing them to use these funds to pay premiums.
Beneficiary Designations: Periodically review beneficiary designations with clients to ensure that life changes (e.g., marriage, birth of children, death of spouse) are reflected accurately, and to confirm that policy payouts align with the client’s overall estate goals.
Coordination with Other Estate Planning Instruments: Life insurance can work alongside wills, trusts, and other estate planning tools. Advisors should collaborate with estate planning attorneys and accountants to ensure the life insurance strategy complements the client’s broader estate plan and minimizes taxes effectively.
Consider a client with an estate valued at $10 million, primarily in illiquid assets like real estate and a family business. Without sufficient liquid assets, their heirs may struggle to cover estate taxes, which could force them to sell parts of the business or property. By setting up a life insurance policy held in an ILIT, the client can ensure that upon their passing, the policy’s tax-free death benefit will provide the funds necessary to cover estate taxes, preserving the family business and real estate for the next generation.
Life insurance can play an integral role in a well-rounded estate plan, offering clients peace of mind and flexibility for their heirs. By understanding and leveraging life insurance in estate planning, you can help clients maintain liquidity, reduce tax burdens, and ensure a smooth, equitable transfer of wealth to future generations. Collaborate with other professionals when needed to craft tailored, compliant solutions that align with each client’s unique financial and estate planning objectives.
Through careful planning and ongoing assessment, life insurance can become a valuable asset in meeting clients’ legacy goals.