Life
Insurance Trust
A
number of opportunities are available for estate planning with life insurance.
Many different types of life insurance products are on the market today,
including "Term Insurance", "Universal Life Insurance",
"Split Dollar Insurance" and "Whole Life Insurance".
Depending upon the particular situation, one or more of these products may have
a valuable place in your estate plan. "Split Dollar Insurance"
provides that a portion of the cost is paid by a business entity, the other
portion is paid by another person (e.g., the insured). Payment of a potion of
the premiums by the business creates taxable income to the employee-insured.
The beneficiary can be the insured, his estate, the business or family members.
These policies are useful to provide cash on the death of the insured which can
then be available to fund buy-sell agreement in which the employee pays for the
term portion of a policy, while the corporation pays for the whole life or
investment portion. With each of these products, it is possible to establish an
irrevocable life insurance trust during your lifetime so that in the event you
die more than three years after the creation of the trust, the insurance
proceeds can be excluded from both your taxable estate and from the taxable
estate of your surviving spouse. An insurance trust might provide that upon
your death, the proceeds from your life insurance policies are to be collected
by your Trustees (one of whom can be your spouse) and all of the income from
the trust is to be paid to your spouse for life. The Trustees (other than your
spouse) could have the right to invade the principal of the trust for your
spouses benefit. Upon the death of your spouse, the assets could pass to your
successor beneficiaries, such as your children, either outright or in further
trust. To the extent that the value of the trust increases during the term of
the trust, all of the trust assets, including the appreciation, will pass to
the ultimate beneficiaries. If you are presently discussing the possibility of
purchasing life insurance, consideration should be given to whether the policy
should be owned by an individual or by a trust, as well as the selection of the
beneficiaries.
A
number of advantages and disadvantages of insurance trusts should be
considered.
Advantages
(a)
If you die more than three years after the creation of the trust and its
funding, the assets in the trust are excluded from your estate.
(b)
The trust will provide liquidity to help pay the estate taxes and
administration expenses that may be payable on your other assets.
Disadvantages
(a)
The trust is irrevocable and the provisions of the trust (including ownership
of the policy by the trust), cannot be changed even if circumstances change.
Grantor
Retained Income Trust ("Grit")
This
type of trust involves a current gift by you to a trust wherein the
"Grantor" (you) retains an income interest for a specified number of
years (the "Term") and at the expiration of the term, one or more
named beneficiaries receive the assets in the trust, either outright or in
further trust. The IRS actuarial tables, which presently assume a 10% return on
trust investments, are used to value the remainder interests for gift tax
purposes.
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