Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Do Beneficiaries Pay Taxes on Life Insurance?

 

Usually, they don’t, but these workarounds can help when they do

Generally speaking, when the beneficiary of a life insurance policy receives the death benefit, this money is not counted as taxable income, and the beneficiary does not have to pay taxes on it.

However, situations can exist where the beneficiary is taxed on some or all of a policy’s proceeds. If the policyholder elects not to have the benefit paid out immediately upon their death but instead held by the life insurance company for a given period of time, the beneficiary may have to pay taxes on the interest generated during that period.1 And when a death benefit is paid to an estate, the person or persons inheriting the estate may have to pay estate taxes.

However, detailed below, there are several ways that these estate taxes may be avoided.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • In a typical situation, inherited money from a life insurance policy beneficiary is not taxed as income.
  • There are a few exceptions to this common rule of thumb.
  • In some cases, a beneficiary may have to pay tax on any interest the policy accrued.
  • If the policyholder named an estate rather than an individual, as a beneficiary, the person or people inheriting the estate might have to pay estate taxes.
  • You must list beneficiaries (individuals or an estate) on your life insurance policy.

Interest Income

Income earned in the form of interest is almost always taxable at some point. Life insurance is no exception. This means when a beneficiary receives life insurance proceeds after a period of interest accumulation rather than immediately upon the policyholder’s death, the beneficiary must pay taxes, not on the entire benefit, but on the interest.1

For example, if the death benefit is $500,000, but it earns 10% interest for one year before being paid out, the beneficiary will owe taxes on the $50,000 growth.

Estate and Inheritance Taxes

One poor decision that investors seem to frequently make is to name “payable to my estate” as the beneficiary of a contractual agreement, such as an individual retirement account (IRA), an annuity, or a life insurance policy. However, when you name the estate as your beneficiary, you take away the contractual advantage of naming a real person and subject the financial product to the probate process. Leaving items to your estate also increases the estate’s value, and it could subject your heirs to exceptionally high estate taxes.

Section 2042 of the Internal Revenue Code states that the value of life insurance proceeds insuring your life is included in your gross estate if the proceeds are payable:

  1. To your estate, either directly or indirectly
  2. To named beneficiaries, if you possessed any “incidents of ownership” in the policy at the time of your death

Using an Ownership Transfer to Avoid Taxation

Federal taxes won’t be due on many estates; due to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017, the exemption amount was increased to $11.7 million for 2021 and $12.06 million for 2022. Meanwhile, the maximum estate tax rate is capped at 40%.

For those estates that will owe taxes, whether life insurance proceeds are included as part of the taxable estate depends on the ownership of the policy at the time of the insured’s death. If you want your life insurance proceeds to avoid federal taxation, you’ll need to transfer ownership of your policy to another person or entity.

Here are a few guidelines to remember when considering an ownership transfer:

  1. Choose a competent adult/entity to be the new owner (it may be the policy beneficiary), then call your insurance company for the proper assignment, or transfer of ownership, forms.
  2. New owners must pay the premiums on the policy. However, you can gift up to $15,000 per person in 2021 and $16,000 in 2022, so the recipient could use some of this gift to pay premiums.6
  3. You will give up all rights to make changes to this policy in the future. However, if a child, family member, or friend is named the new owner, changes can be made by the new owner at your request.
  4. Because ownership transfer is an irrevocable event, beware of divorce situations when planning to name the new owner.
  5. Obtain written confirmation from your insurance company as proof of the ownership change.

Gift Tax

If three different individuals are listed as the insured, policy owner, and the beneficiary, then gift tax may occur, because in most cases, the insured and the policy owner are one and the same. However, if the insured is a different person than the policy owner, the IRS will conclude that the death benefit amount from the policy owner to the beneficiary, and you may have to pay gift tax on the amount.

Once you are deceased, the gift tax comes due, but the beneficiary of the death benefit won’t have to pay it unless it is more than $12.06 million, and that includes any gifts made of more than $16,000 a year.

Using Life Insurance Trusts to Avoid Taxation

A second way to remove life insurance proceeds from your taxable estate is to create an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT). To complete an ownership transfer, you cannot be the trustee of the trust, and you may not retain any rights to revoke the trust. In this case, the policy is held in trust, and you will no longer be considered the owner. Therefore, the proceeds are not included as part of your estate.

Why choose trust ownership rather than transferring ownership to another person? One reason might be that you still wish to maintain some legal control over the policy. Or perhaps you are afraid that an individual owner may fail to pay premiums, whereas, in the trust, you can ensure that all premiums are paid promptly. If the beneficiaries of the proceeds are minor children from a previous marriage, an ILIT will allow you to name a trusted family member as trustee to handle the money for the children under the terms of the trust document.

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Credits to: Greg Depersio

Reviewed by: Eric Estevez

Fact Checked by: Skylar Clarine

Date of Publication: May 25, 2022

Source: https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/102015/do-beneficiaries-pay-taxes-life-insurance.asp


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