Remember Me
forgot your password?

Ilit - the Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust

Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs) are planning tools used to keep life insurance proceeds outside of the taxable estate.

For example, if a married couple has an estate of 6 million, they can pass 4 million to the next generation with no tax if they set up the proper trust arrangement to take advantage of the maximum lifetime unified credits. That leaves 2 million still subject to tax under the current law.

The logical thing to do is to purchase a survivorship life insurance policy for the projected tax. However, a policy purchased in the manner most people are familiar with, the problem is not solved; it is compounded.

If the couple has any "incidences of ownership" in the policy, it will be included in the estate. The purchase of a one million dollar policy increases the estate to 7 million. Four million passes tax-free, but now the taxable estate is 3 million. This increases the tax by some $225,000.

Enter the Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust.

Attorneys draft Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts. The trust will apply for its own Federal Tax ID number. The trust will then apply for the survivorship life insurance policy. It will be the applicant, owner and beneficiary of the policy. Typical wording is "The John and Mary Smith Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust dated April 5, 2007, JPMorgan Chase Bank, trustee."

In this example, since neither John nor Mary has any "incidence of ownership" in the policy, it will not be part of their taxable estate.

The Owner and Beneficiary

As opposed to using an ILIT, I have worked with a few cases where the only child or children are the owner and beneficiary. This may work. However, each year the parents gift the money to pay the premium, there is no assurance that the money will be used to pay the premium. Furthermore, the children, as owners, have access to the cash values. An ILIT has much more assurance.

I have seen the trustee be a child, the couple's attorney, accountant or a long-time family friend. All of these will work, but an un-biased third party, such as a bank, is much better. If an individual is the trustee, name a bank as the successor trustee. Banks don't die.

The Crummey Letter

Typically, the life insurance premiums are paid by the parents in the form of annual gifts to the Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust. Currently (2007) a person can give up to $12,000 each year to as many people as they want without paying gift tax or having the amount subtracted from their lifetime exclusion. However, these gifts must be "present interest" gifts, which mean the recipient must have immediate rights to the gift.

Gifts to an ILIT, for paying premiums on a life insurance policy owned by the ILIT, are not "present interest" gifts. A "Crummey" letter qualifies the gift as a "present interest" gift. The letter is not crummy or poorly written; the letter takes its name from a court case initiated in 1968 by Clifford Crummey, who was trying to do this very same thing: make annual gifts present interest gifts. Ultimately, the outcome of the case required the use of a letter, now known as the "Crummey" letter.

A letter is sent every year to each of the beneficiaries of the ILIT. It simply states that a gift has been made to the ILIT and they can withdraw it if they want within a certain timeframe, usually 30 or 60 days. If they don't exercise this right, the gift becomes a present interest gift.

Obviously, there is an "understanding" between the parents and children to ignore these letters, as it is a part of the overall estate plan. The annual gifts and the ensuing yearly Crummey letters do not have to go to children with a legal capacity, such as age 18. I have seen letters written to 4-month-old babies. In this case, even though the baby was not able to read the letter or understand the estate planning rationale behind it, it did not exercise its right to the gift. Phew, another legal bullet dodged.

As you can see, it is very important to arrange for the annual drafting of these Crummey letters. Some banks' trust departments used to provide this service if they were the trustee of the trust. This was just a courtesy as they never would see or manage any of the life insurance proceeds.



The best bet is to have your attorney do the letters. I have one client whose law firm (under a written set of instructions) has the premium notice from the life insurance company sent to their firm, prepare and send the Crummey letters and then pay the premium. All the client has to do is open a letter each year from the law firm indicating a premium is due and send them a check. Other than that, they don't have to lift a finger. A nice service.

If you have an estate that will be subject to estate taxes and your advisors suggest a life insurance policy to pay the tax at a discount, make sure you evaluate the use of an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust.

Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU

Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU is a 36-year financial and estate planning veteran and author of the free newsletter, "The Estate Preservation Advisor". For cutting-edge, easy-to-understand financial planning resources and techniques to increase your income, reduce taxes and preserve your estate, go to http://theestatepreservationadvisor.com/rd/subscribe.htm

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Insurance Articles
  • More from Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU

Choosing the Right Insurance Company for Your Business

By: Johan Danies | 02/01/2010
One of the most important parts of your business plan is your insurance. So many businesses neglect this essential aspect and are left with only ashes after disaster strikes.

Texas Health Insurance: Availing Of The Medicare Supplement

By: Steve Patterson | 02/01/2010
Recently, there has been a growing awareness in Texas regarding health care programs. Insurance agencies in Texas extend their services to the public based on this trend. To avail of Texas Health Insurance, there are various considerations and this is what this article is all about.

Home Insurance Cover: Does Your Home Insurance Cover Your Back?

By: Mark Gardner | 02/01/2010
Your home is the one of most valued assets that you will ever own. Home insurance cover offers you protection from any eventualities that may occur at present or in the near future. When searching for home insurance cover, note the following..

How To Get Cheap Auto Insurance

By: Sutiyo Na | 02/01/2010
Car Insurance payments aren't cheap but it doesn't mean that you can't lower your expenses on your insurance policies. There are several ways that can help you save a few dollars on car insurance. Here are some tips you can follow to get cheap auto insurance...

How to Get Auto Insurance

By: Sutiyo Na | 02/01/2010
Responsible ownership is required when getting a new car. Your responsibility as a car owner does not need in keeping your car in tip top condition. Insurance for your car prevents you from being a liability in the streets. Here are some tips you can follow when getting car insurance.

Great Ways To Obtain Auto Insurance Savings

By: Sutiyo Na | 02/01/2010
Getting excellently covered insurance is one of the most expensive things one could make in their entire life. But it is also one the most basic commodities we all should make obviously for protection. It is a good thing that auto insurance savings are possible, that is, if you know how to get them.

Looking For Great Life Insurance? You Absolutely Must Compare Life Insurance Quotes

By: Evan Povich | 01/01/2010
If you're looking for great life insurance you don't go to one company. You go to several companies and get insurance quotes from all of them. Online Life Insurance Comparison is the Best Way To Get Cheap Life Insurance. Don't waste time driving from office to office asking for life quotes. It's simply not practical.

Car Insurance In New York

By: jack heis | 01/01/2010
Even though it is not mandatory in every state, Getting car insurance in New York is just like getting it anywhere else, in fact there are very strict penalties if you choose to drive without auto insurance, such as a fine, suspension of your license, or you may even end up losing it. There are different coverage types which varies from state to state in the United States.

How a Charitable Remainder Trust Avoids Capital Gains

By: Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU | 14/06/2007 | Taxes
Do you own a highly appreciated asset that produces little or no income? Are you selling your business? Are you highly compensated and looking to shelter more of your income? Put the charitable remainder trust in your list of options.

New Kid on the Block: Indexed Universal Life

By: Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU | 07/06/2007 | Insurance
Do you think whole life insurance is a poor investment? Are you skittish about variable universal life due to fluctuations in the stock market? What if there was an insurance policy with cash values linked to the equity market but that could only go up and never go down? Nirvana? Here it is...

How to Sell your Life Insurance Policy for More Than the Cash Value

By: Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU | 30/05/2007 | Insurance
Do you need cash for medical expenses, to pay off debts or to buy that long-desired boat, cabin, car or RV? If so, you may be able to sell an insurance policy that you no longer need.

Hot New Product: Long Term Care Annuities

By: Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU | 24/05/2007 | Insurance
Have you made the decision not to buy long term care insurance because you feel you will never need it? Do you think it is too expensive? Do you have health problems preventing you from qualifying? Would you like long term care without a policy or premiums? Sound too good to be true? Read on…

Why an Individual Disability Insurance Policy is Better Than Group Ltd

By: Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU | 09/05/2007 | Insurance
Are you covered by a group long term disability insurance plan at work? How likely is the policy to pay? Learn where the holes are in your coverage and why an individual disability insurance policy is better.

The Buy-sell Agreement: Why it is the Simple Solution

By: Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU | 02/05/2007 | Strategic Planning
Studies have shown that 46% of business owners do not intend to ever retire from their businesses. Amidst the sophisticated estate planning techniques for business succession planning, the simple buy-sell agreement solves a myriad of post-death problems. Here's how…

Ten Things the Average Person Does not Know About Annuities

By: Robert D. Cavanaugh, CLU | 25/04/2007 | Investing
Many people buy annuities blind. Others avoid them due to a misunderstanding. Here is a simple primer on deferred annuities which will make you a smarter consumer.

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.29, 6, w3)