Progar & Company, P.A.
Certified Public Accounting services for businesses and individuals
Keeping life insurance out of your estate (MS Word)
Keeping life insurance out of your estate (.pdf)
Keeping life insurance out of your estate
Dear Reader:
You recently asked how to make sure the life insurance benefits your
family will receive after your death avoid the federal estate tax.
This is still an important issue. Even though federal tax
legislation enacted in 2001 repeals the estate tax, the repeal is
not effective until 2010. In the meantime, the rules on the estate
tax taxation of life insurance benefits remain in force.
Insurance on your life will be included in your taxable estate if
either:
(1) Your estate is the beneficiary of the insurance proceeds, or
(2) You possessed certain economic ownership rights (“incidents of
ownership”) in the policy at your death (or within three years of
your death).
Avoiding the first situation is easy: just make sure your estate is
not designated as beneficiary of the policy.
The second rule is more complex. Clearly, if you are the owner of
the policy, the proceeds are included in your estate regardless of
who the beneficiary is. However, simply having someone else possess
legal title to the policy will not prevent this result if you keep
so-called “incidents of ownership” in the policy. Rights that, if
held by you, will cause the proceeds to be taxed in your estate
include:
-
the right to change beneficiaries,
-
the right to assign the policy (or to revoke an assignment),
-
the right to pledge the policy as security for a loan,
-
the right to borrow against the policy's cash surrender value,
and
-
the right to surrender or cancel the policy.
Keep in mind that merely having any of the above powers will
cause the proceeds to be taxed in your estate even if you never
exercise the power.
Buy-sell agreements.
Life insurance obtained to fund a buy-sell agreement for a business
interest under a “cross-purchase” arrangement will not be taxed in
your estate (unless the estate is named as beneficiary). For
example, say A and B are partners who agree that the partnership
interest of the first of them to die will be bought by the surviving
partner. To fund these obligations, A buys a life insurance policy
on B's life. A pays all the premiums, retains all incidents of
ownership, and names himself beneficiary. B does the same regarding
A. When the first partner dies, the insurance proceeds are not taxed
in his estate.
Life insurance trusts.
A life insurance trust is an effective vehicle that can be set up to
keep life insurance proceeds from being taxed in the insured's
estate. Typically, the policy is transferred to the trust along with
assets that can be used to pay future premiums. Alternatively, the
trust buys the insurance itself with funds contributed by the
insured. As long as the trust agreement gives the insured none of
the ownership rights described above, the proceeds will not be
included in his estate.
The three-year rule.
If you are considering setting up a life insurance trust with a
policy you own currently or simply assigning away your ownership
rights in such a policy, please call me as soon as you reasonably
can to effect these moves. Unless you live for at least three years
after these steps are taken, the proceeds will be taxed in your
estate. For policies in which you never held incidents of ownership,
the three-year rule doesn't apply.
Please call if you'd like to discuss this area further.
Lewes CPA
office