The Case For Permanent Insurance

Published Monday, December 7, 2009 at: 7:00 AM EST

Term life insurance is like coverage to protect your car or pay medical bills. As long as you keep paying the premiums, you’re covered. With term life insurance, if you die while the policy’s in force, your beneficiaries will receive a specified payment. But there’s another kind of life insurance that may be preferable in some situations. Permanent insurance, also known cash value insurance, also requires premium payments. However, part of each payment builds the value of the policy, which remains in force throughout your life.

Although term insurance is generally less expensive than permanent insurance at first, if you keep renewing a term policy at progressively higher rates, it could eventually cost more than a permanent policy. If your need for life insurance will end—when the house is paid off, say, or when the kids are grown or your spouse has sufficient wealth to do without the income you provide—term insurance may be the way to go. However, if there will be a need for cash whenever you die—to create needed liquidity, help fund a succession plan at your business, or for another purpose—a permanent life policy may be preferable.

The extra expense of whole life insurance stems from your investment in the contract. Though much of each premium covers insurance costs, the rest goes into a kind of savings account. You own that account, which ultimately increases the value of your policy.

Permanent insurance comes in a variety of forms, with some enabling you to adjust premiums based on policy earnings, borrow against the policy, or pay off premiums in a lump sum or over a fixed period of time. And if you decide you no longer need a permanent policy, you can surrender it for its cash value.

Here are two situations in which permanent insurance may play a crucial role.

Estate planning. Creating liquidity at death is a tried-and-true use for life insurance, and with a permanent policy, you know it will be there when it’s needed. It can be employed for any of the following.

  • To fund a “special needs” trust for a disabled or incapacitated child or relative who requires life-long care
  • To provide cash for a surviving spouse if other assets—a home, business, or other property—don’t produce income
  • To fund an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT). Though a life insurance death benefit isn’t taxed as income, it will be included in your taxable estate. A properly executed ILIT can pass along insurance proceeds to heirs without estate taxes.
  • To generate cash to pay estate taxes

Business buyouts. For business owners, permanent insurance can provide reliable liquid assets to buy out a deceased owner. For example, your company could purchase a life policy on each owner. Then, if you die first, the death benefit paid to the business could be transferred to your heirs in exchange for your interest in the company.

Choosing a life insurance policy that protects your family and suits your financial situation can be tricky. Please give us a call if you’d like us to review your current coverage and see whether changes are needed.

This article was written by a professional financial journalist for Preferred NY Financial Group,LLC and is not intended as legal or investment advice.

An individual retirement account (IRA) allows individuals to direct pretax incom, up to specific annual limits, toward retirements that can grow tax-deferred (no capital gains or dividend income is taxed). Individual taxpayers are allowed to contribute 100% of compensation up to a specified maximum dollar amount to their Tranditional IRA. Contributions to the Tranditional IRA may be tax-deductible depending on the taxpayer's income, tax-filling status and other factors. Taxed must be paid upon withdrawal of any deducted contributions plus earnings and on the earnings from your non-deducted contributions. Prior to age 59%, distributions may be taken for certain reasons without incurring a 10 percent penalty on earnings. None of the information in this document should be considered tax or legal advice. Please consult with your legal or tax advisor for more information concerning your individual situation.

Contributions to a Roth IRA are not tax deductible and these is no mandatory distribution age. All earnings and principal are tax free if rules and regulations are followed. Eligibility for a Roth account depends on income. Principal contributions can be withdrawn any time without penalty (subject to some minimal conditions).

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