When does it make sense for a trust to own your life insurance policy?

Holding insurance in an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust could reduce estate taxes for your family. Learn if it is the right move for you.

Contributors

Managing Director, Head of Wealth Planning and Advice, J.P. Morgan Wealth Management

Estate planners and insurance professionals often recommend that people create a separate trust to own life insurance policies. Whether a life insurance trust makes sense for you depends on your goals and a number of other factors.

Why own life insurance in a trust?

If you own a life insurance policy, you probably know that the beneficiaries you’ve named to receive the insurance proceeds when you pass away get that money income tax-free.

However, payout on a life insurance policy may not be exempt from estate tax, which is why planners often recommend that a trust own your life insurance policy instead of you owning it.

If you’re married and you name your spouse as the beneficiary of a life insurance policy that you own, there’s no estate tax on the insurance proceeds when you pass away because the payment to your spouse qualifies for the unlimited marital deduction from estate tax.

When your spouse eventually passes away, however, any of the proceeds that are still in your spouse’s name are subject to estate tax. An insurance trust can be an easy way to shelter the insurance proceeds from eventual estate taxes and prevent those proceeds from pushing your spouse’s estate value over the estate tax exemption threshold. And if you aren’t married, or if you and your spouse have a policy that only pays out on the death of the second spouse to die (a survivorship or second-to-die policy), having a trust as the policy owner can protect the insurance proceeds from estate tax on the death of your survivor. And don’t think only of the federal estate tax; if you live in one of the states that has a separate, state-level estate tax, you may want to consider an insurance trust even if your net worth (plus insurance proceeds) doesn’t exceed the federal threshold.

How it works?

Existing insurance: If you already own one or more life insurance policies, you can change ownership from your name to your insurance trust.

First, you would work with an estate planning attorney to create the trust document. You’ll want to consider who will act as trustee of the trust and under what circumstances your beneficiaries will have access to the insurance proceeds.

Once the insurance trust is drafted and signed by you and the trustee or trustees, you should get a change of ownership form from your insurance broker or from the insurance company. Once you’ve transferred ownership by completing the form and submitting it to your insurance company, the trust owns the policy and payments of the insurance proceeds to the trust should be excluded from your, and your spouse’s, taxable estates. At the same time you change ownership of the policy, you may also want to name the trust as beneficiary.

There are two wrinkles, however:

New insurance: If you don’t own an insurance policy today, the most effective way to proceed is to create an insurance trust first. The trust should then apply for insurance on your life. The trust will be the original owner when the policy is issued, which means that the insurance amount will be outside of your estate from the moment the policy is issued – there’s no three-year lookback.

The mechanics

Once the policy is in your trust, you and your trustees still have to make sure that premiums are paid every year. The trust makes the process a little more complicated, but it will quickly become routine.