What is a Life Insurance Trust?

by Efin Advisor | October 19, 2009

efin101A Life Insurance Trust is an irrevocable, non-amendable trust which is both the owner and beneficiary of one or more life insurance policies.

Upon the death of the insured, the Trustee invests the insurance proceeds and administers the trust for one or more beneficiaries. If the trust owns insurance on the life of a married person, the non-insured spouse and children are often beneficiaries of the insurance trust. If the trust owns “second to die” or survivorship insurance which only pays when both spouses are deceased, only the children would be beneficiaries of the insurance trust.

In the United States, proper ownership of life insurance is important if the insurance proceeds are not to be subject to  federal estate taxation. If the policy is owned by the insured, the proceeds will be subject to estate tax.  To avoid estate taxation, some insureds name a child, spouse or other beneficiary as the owner of the policy.

There are, however, two drawbacks to having insurance proceeds paid outright to a child, spouse or other beneficiary. Doing so may be inconsistent with the insured’s wishes or the best interests of the beneficiary, who might be a minor or lacking in financial sophistication and unable to invest the proceeds wisely.

The insurance proceeds will be included in the beneficiary’s taxable estate at his or her subsequent death. If the proceeds are used to pay the insured’s estate taxes, it would at first appear that the proceeds could not be on hand to be taxed at the beneficiary’s subsequent death. However, using insurance proceeds to pay the insured’s estate taxes effectively increases the beneficiary’s estate since the beneficiary will not have to sell inherited assets to pay such taxes.

The solution to both drawbacks is usually an irrevocable life insurance trust.

Insurance trusts may be funded or nonfunded. A funded life insurance trust owns both one or more insurance contracts and income producing assets. The income from the assets is used to pay some or all of the premiums. Funded insurance trusts are not commonly used for two reasons:

The additional gift tax cost of transferring income producing assets to the trust and
the grantor trust rules of IRC §677(a)(3) cause the grantor to be taxed on the trust’s income. Unfunded insurance trusts own one or more policies of insurance and are funded by annual gifts from the grantor. Customarily, the trustee of the insurance trust is authorized, but not required, to either purchase assets from the insured’s estate or loan insurance proceeds to his or her estate. Since the trustee of the insurance trust possesses all incidents of ownership in the insurance policy, the insurance trust provides the insured’s estate with liquidity while shielding the insurance proceeds or assets purchased with the proceeds from estate tax when the insured dies, provided the trust has the appropriate Settlor and trustee.

Efinancial can assist with the creation and management of a Life Insurance Trust. Ask us how!

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