Life Insurance Premium Limits (MECs)



Similar documents
The Flexibility of Cash Value Life Insurance

Nationwide Insurance-based Retirement Plan. What will your retirement look like?

PROTECTION PROTECTION SIUL. The pacesetter in affordable, secure protection. For two. CONSUMER GUIDE IM4156CG

Using Cash Value Life Insurance for Retirement Savings

New Enhanced Life Insurance Program

Implications of Withdrawals and Loans from a Life Insurance Policy

Tax Planning with Life Insurance

WHOLE LIFE INSURANCE. Whole Life PERSONAL GUIDE INVEST INSURE RETIRE

A New Look at Cash Value as an Asset

Indexed Annuities. Fixed vs. Indexed Annuities

White Paper: Using Cash Value Life Insurance for Retirement Savings

Understanding the Income Taxation of Life Insurance

A Technical Guide for Individuals. The Whole Story. Understanding the features and benefits of whole life insurance. Insurance Strategies

Small Business: Dealing with Retirement

Getting the Most from Your Insurance

An Overview Guide for Individuals. Whole Life Insurance as Part of Your Accumulation Strategy. Insurance Strategies

Twelve Life Insurance Mistakes

YOU CAN OWN? WHY RENT WHEN

Are you satisfied with the progress you ve made toward your retirement?

Corporate asset efficiency

MODIFIED ENDOWMENT CONTRACTS

COLLEGE FUNDING WITH PERMANENT LIFE INSURANCE

An Alternative to Roth IRAs When Limits Apply

VARIABLE UNIVERSAL LIFE YOUR 5-MINUTE GUIDE. You want it all.

Preserving value for the next generation. Lincoln LifeLINC Advisor Guide. For agent or broker use only. Not for use with the public.

The Baltimore Life Insurance Company

ira individual retirement accounts Traditional IRA

CHAPTER 8 TAX CONSIDERATIONS

helping you make sense of your life insurance options

A guide to buying insurance

No bank guarantee Not a deposit May lose value Not FDIC/NCUA insured Not insured by any federal government agency

HARTFORD LEADERS VUL LEGACY

A Story of Guarantees and Financial Versatility

Life Insurance. Picture Your Legacy. New York Life Legacy Creator Single Premium Variable Universal Life. The Company You Keep

Freedom to enjoy tax-free retirement income

Small Business Planning. Insurance-based Retirement Plan. What will your retirement look like?

Whole Life Insurance as a Financial Asset

Key Person Life in brief

Variable universal life insurance. Quick reference. You want it all.

Key Person Coverage. Prepared for: Date: Presented by:

401(k) Overlay Executive Benefit Plan. A Customized Life Insurance Strategy to Help Recruit, Retain and Reward Key Executives

A guide to buying insurance from Wells Fargo Advisors

We keep our promises.

Chapter 19 Retirement Products: Annuities and Individual Retirement Accounts

Life Insurance Income Taxation in brief

White Paper Corporate Owned Life Insurance

Preserve what you spent a lifetime creating

Preparing for Your Retirement: The Role of Life Insurance in Retirement Planning

THE TAX-FREE SAVINGS ACCOUNT

State Life Care Solutions. Asset-Care. Producer guide

How To Tax An Annuity In The United States

Cash Bonus Elite. Annuity CB Page 1 of 6

Why Rent When You Can Own?

Life Insurance Companies and Products

A solution offering much more than life insurance.

INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE PLACEMENT VARIABLE LIFE INSURANCE. A Fountainhead Forum Fact Sheet

Understanding Annuities: A Lesson in Fixed Interest and Indexed Annuities Prepared for: Your Clients

Enjoy the freedom of tax-free retirement income

How To Get A Universal Life Insurance Policy

Scheduled for Markup by the HOUSE COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS on May 29, Prepared by the Staff of the JOINT COMMITTEE ON TAXATION

Make an informed choice

A Selective Executive Retirement Plan

ANALYSIS OF AMENDED BILL

White Paper Tax Planning with Life Insurance

Annuities 101. What is an annuity. Type of Annuities. How to get started

Life Insurance in Estate Planning

Advanced Markets Success Strategy Life Insurance in Retirement Planning Plus

Roth IRA Conversion. (Frequently Asked Questions) # /10

Understanding Annuities: A Lesson in Indexed Annuities

OneTEAM THERE IS MORE THAN ONE WAY TO GET TO RETIREMENT. Roth 401(k): A New Outlook on Saving

Tax-exempt organizations are subject to more

Helping to Continue a Business by Protecting Its Most Valuable Contributors Through Life Insurance

HSA Fundamentals Health Savings Account Disclosure Statement and Adoption Agreement

LIF LIFE INSURANCE E TERM. Owning vs. Renting. Permanent or term life insurance. which is right for you?

Chapter 14. Agenda. Individual Annuities. Annuities and Individual Retirement Accounts

Retirement Compensation Arrangement

HSA Fundamentals Health Savings Account Disclosure Statement and Adoption Agreement

Building Wealth: Using Premium Financed Indexed Life Insurance (PFIUL)

Understanding Annuities: A Lesson in Annuities

Affinity 7. Life Series. Affinity 7 NQ Participating Whole Life. Affinity 7 Q Participating Whole Life. Affinity Participating Whole Life

Maximize Your Pension with Life Insurance

Roth IRA. Answers. To Your. Questions

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

Small Business Planning. Split Dollar Plans Using Life Insurance. What s the prescription for a successful workforce?

How To Convert An Ira To A Roth Ira

Section. Group Universal Life Insurance

Description of Employer Cash Flow and Assets

Flexible Premium Adjustable Life Insurance Policy Illustration

Why rent when you can own?

Personal Income Tax Bulletin IRAs

Executive Bonus Plans

SUMMARY REVIEW COLORADO COUNTY OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT ASSOCIATION 457 DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLAN FOR THE

LIFE WHOLE. MetLife Promise Whole LifeSM. life. a foundation for

The IRA Rollover. Making Sense Out of Your Retirement Plan Distribution

Maximizing Wealth Transfer using Innovative Trust Designs

Asset-Care. Producer guide. Products and financial services provided by The State Life Insurance Company a OneAmerica company

Variable Universal Life Insurance

Permanent Benefit Group Life Insurance Under Code Section 79

Leveraging wealth transfer using private financing

Transcription:

Life Insurance Premium Limits (MECs) Life insurance contracts enjoy a special tax benefit because the growth in cash values during the term of the contract is not currently taxed. In addition, when there is sufficient cash value accumulated, the policyowner may take low-interest, nontaxable loans. However, loans do potentially lower the death benefit and accrue interest. These tax benefits led some policyowners to begin using life insurance contracts not primarily for death protection, but instead as a tax-favored investment. That is, the premium paid could be many times the amount required to pay for the insurance, with the excess going into the cash value to accumulate tax-deferred. The policyowner could then borrow from the cash value without tax consequences. To discourage the use of life insurance policies for tax avoidance, Congress imposed limitations on how much money may be paid into a life insurance policy overall, and within a certain period of time. Section 7702 of the Internal Revenue Code established this cap. If the 7702 limits are exceeded, the policy becomes a Modified Endowment Contract, or MEC. A MEC, even a singlepremium life insurance policy, can still qualify for the income taxfree death benefit and tax-deferred inside buildup generally available for life insurance policies. However, distributions from a MEC are not tax-favored but are subject to certain special rules: Gains withdrawn, even by loan, are subject to income taxation if there is gain in the policy. Gains are deemed taken from the policy first, before the already-taxed money (the premiums) may be withdrawn. This rule requires that, until the gains are completely exhausted by withdrawals or loans, all funds received must be included in gross income. Only after all taxable earnings are withdrawn is the nontaxable principal withdrawn. page 1 of 5

A 10 percent additional penalty tax is imposed on amounts received from a MEC that are includable in the policyowner s gross income unless such amounts are received: after the policyowner has become disabled; after the policyowner has reached age 59 1/2; or in the form of a series of substantially equal periodic payments for the life or life expectancy of the policyowner, or for the joint lives or life expectancies or the policyowner and his/her beneficiary. The limits imposed on MECs are not stated in general as a certain dollar amount. Instead, the limits have to do with the relationship between: The cumulative premiums actually paid during the first seven years and The cumulative net level premiums permitted during the same seven years. This is called the 7-pay test. To meet the requirements, policy premiums must be small enough in amount and sufficiently spread out in time that they are able to pass the test using accepted actuarial guidelines. Insurance companies determine the limits of the permitted net level premium amounts policy-by-policy when each policy is first issued, based on the MEC rules. If there is a material change in the policy, such as (but not limited to) an increase in the benefits provided or additional benefits, the policy will be treated as a new contract as of the date of the material change. The 7-pay test must again be satisfied, starting on the date of the material change. If there is a reduction in benefits during the first seven years of the contract, the MEC definition is applied as if the contract had originally been issued at the reduced benefit level. However, any reduction in benefits that is attributable to the non-payment of premiums due under the contract is not considered a reduction in benefits if the benefits are reinstated within 90 days. page 2 of 5

This illustration shows one policy that meets the 7-pay test and another that does not. Remember, cumulative premiums must not exceed the total of the permitted cumulative net level premiums paid for the same period. For this example, assume the annual net level premium for each policy is $2,000, but over the 7-year period, varying amounts have been paid as shown below. Policy #1 Policy #1 Policy #2 Policy #2 7-Pay Annual Cumulative Annual Cumulative MEC Limit Premiums Premiums Premiums Premiums Premiums Paid Paid Paid Paid Permitted Year 1 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 Year 2 $2,000 $4,000 $1,000 $3,000 $4,000 Year 3 $1,000 $5,000 $2,000 $5,000 $6,000 Year 4 $3,000 $8,000 $2,000 $7,000 $8,000 Year 5 $3,000 $11,000 $1,500 $8,500 $10,000 Year 6 $2,500 $13,500 $2,000 $10,500 $12,000 Year 7 $1,000 $14,500 $3,000 $13,500 $14,000 By the 5th year, the first policyowner has paid excessive premiums, reaching a cumulative total ($11,000) that is greater than the permitted 7-pay limit ($10,000). Unless the excess premium in year 5 is timely refunded, this policy becomes a Modified Endowment Contract and is no longer eligible for some of the tax benefits afforded a life insurance policy. The second policy stays within the limits, so there are no negative consequences. page 3 of 5

Life Insurance Premium Limits (MECs) What Is Meant by Life Insurance Premium Limits and MECs? Life insurance policies enjoy certain tax benefits that are not available in other savings vehicles. One of these is a tax-free buildup of cash value that can be accessed through nontaxable loans. If the owner of a life insurance policy pays excessive premiums in order to increase the cash value, the policy will become a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC). A MEC can still qualify for the income tax-free death benefit and tax-deferred inside buildup generally available for life insurance policies. But the earnings in the MEC are subject to taxation when withdrawn. To discourage the use of life insurance policies as tax-deferred investment vehicles, Congress has placed limits on the premium amounts that may be paid over a seven-year period. When those limits are exceeded, the policy becomes a Modified Endowment Contract. What Are the Consequences When a Policy Becomes a MEC? All earnings taken from the cash value, even by loan, are subject to current income taxation. And, if cash value is withdrawn, the earnings are deemed taken first, before any of the principal, which has already been taxed. Under this approach, until all earnings are withdrawn and taxed, no withdrawal is attributed to the nontaxable principal. Additionally, any amount withdrawn is subject to a 10% penalty tax unless the policyowner (1) becomes disabled, (2) has reached age 59 1/2, or (3) receives the distribution as part of a series of substantially equal periodic payments made for: The policyowner s life or life expectancy or The joint lives or joint life expectancies of the policyowner and his or her beneficiary. How Do These Limits Work? When an insurance policy is first issued, the insurance company determines the maximum net level premium amounts permitted by the MEC rules for that particular policy using accepted actuarial guidelines. The annual amounts of premiums paid must stay within those limits during the first seven years of the policy, and if they do, the policy has met what is called the 7-pay test. The 7-pay test compares cumulative premiums actually paid during the first seven years and the cumulative net level premiums permitted for that same period. The 7-pay test applies at issue (hence the first 7 years) but also applies for 7 years following a material change. If at any point during the seven years the cumulative premiums paid exceed the permitted amount, the policy becomes a Modified Endowment Contract subject to adverse tax consequences (provided the excess is not timely refunded). page 4 of 5

We want to thank you for your interest in our professional services, and for this opportunity to present a financial concept that may be pertinent in your personal circumstances. Please contact us if we can answer any questions you have, or if we can provide any additional information on this or other financial topics. page 5 of 5