What to know about using life insurance as a source of income for your children.
Life insurance may be a good source of income for your children if you die. Here’s what you should know.
At some time or other, all parents worry about what will happen to their children if one or both parents were to die prematurely. Often, life insurance is the first place parents turn when these worries arise. Although life insurance may be a good source of income for your children if you die, before buying a policy you should carefully consider whether or not you really need it, what type of policy is best and who should manage the proceeds on behalf of your children.
What Type of Life Insurance Do You Need, If Any?
Some insurance salespeople try to pressure parents into buying high-cost insurance plans by exploiting fears of premature death. These pitches are best viewed with skepticism. Before buying a policy, consider all sources of income for your children if you were to die while they still needed financial support. Those sources might include:
•the property you leave behind
•Social Security survivor’s benefits, and
•grandparents or other family members.
If you are wealthy or have affluent relatives who would step forward if necessary, you need little or no life insurance. And if, like most folks, you’re struggling to pay for your car’s brake job or your kid’s braces, you can’t afford to (and shouldn’t) divert much of your current income to cope with the fairly remote possibility that you may die prematurely.
With this in mind, you should avoid expensive cash value life insurance (whole life, universal life, variable life) policies that offer a lump sum after a certain period of time (20 or 30 years, for example) or after you reach a certain age (often 65). This lump sum payment is sold as a long-term savings/investment feature; it does nothing to affect how much money will be available to your child if you die in the next few years.
If you’re reasonably young and reasonably healthy, consider purchasing a moderate amount of term insurance, which is the cheapest form of life insurance. Younger parents can obtain a significant amount of coverage for relatively low cost, for the obvious reason that statistically they are unlikely to die soon, so the risk to the insurance company is low. It will provide quick cash for your children if necessary, without draining your bank account now.
Leaving Life Insurance Benefits to Minor Children
If you decide to purchase life insurance for the benefit of your children, you need to arrange some legal means for the proceeds to be managed and supervised by a competent adult. If you don’t, and your children are not legal adults when you die, the court will appoint a property guardian for the children. The process necessitates attorneys’ fees, court proceedings and court supervision of life insurance benefits — costs and hassles that surely won’t help your kids. There are several ways to prevent this:
•Rethink your plan to name minors as beneficiaries of your life insurance policy. Instead, name a trusted adult beneficiary who will use the money for the children’s benefit. If you are confident that this adult will not waver from his or her duty, even years down the line, this might be the easiest option.
•Name your children as policy beneficiaries and name an adult custodian under your state’s Uniform Transfers to Minors Act. Most insurance companies permit this and have forms for it. If you want the proceeds to go to more than one child, you’ll need to specify the percentage each one receives.
•If you have a living trust, name the trustee as the beneficiary of the policy. In the trust document, name the minor children as beneficiaries of any money the trust receives from the insurance policy. Also establish within the trust a method to impose adult management over the proceeds, which can be either a child’s trust or a Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) custodianship. You’ll need to give a copy of your living trust to the insurance company.
Using the UTMA vs. Creating a Child’s Trust
There are a few important differences between leaving life insurance benefits to your children under the UTMA and through a child’s trust:
•Age when proceeds are released. In most states, an UTMA custodian must turn the proceeds over to the child at an age specified by law — 18 or 21 in most states, up to 25 in just a few. In contrast, with a child’s trust, you can specify any age at which your child receives the proceeds.
•Reporting requirements. A trustee for a child’s trust must file yearly income tax returns for the trust. An UTMA custodian need not file tax returns, although the minor must file a yearly return reporting money actually received.
•Tax rates. Trust income tax rates are higher than individual tax rates. Annual income above a certain amount in a child’s trust is taxed at the higher trust tax rates. In contrast, all of the property subject to the UTMA is taxed at the child’s individual tax rate. •Ease of fulfilling property management duties. Because the UTMA is built into state law, financial institutions know about it and are comfortable with it. This should make it easy for the custodian to manage the insurance proceeds on behalf of the child.
Generally speaking, an UTMA custodianship is the most attractive option unless the amount of insurance is very large and the child will need a property manager past the age of 21. The UTMA is simpler to set up and manage — and often cheaper (from a tax point of view) — than a child’s trust. A UTMA custodianship is particularly sensible for proceeds below $100,000. Amounts of this size often are expended fairly rapidly for the child’s education and living needs, and are simply not large enough to tie up beyond the age of 21. If larger amounts are involved and you do not believe the child will be able to responsibly handle the money at the UTMA age limit, a child’s trust is a good bet.
Using Life Insurance to Provide for Your Kids
Life insurance may be a good source of income for your children if you die. Here’s what you should know.
At some time or other, all parents worry about what will happen to their children if one or both parents were to die prematurely. Often, life insurance is the first place parents turn when these worries arise. Although life insurance may be a good source of income for your children if you die, before buying a policy you should carefully consider whether or not you really need it, what type of policy is best and who should manage the proceeds on behalf of your children.
What Type of Life Insurance Do You Need, If Any?
Some insurance salespeople try to pressure parents into buying high-cost insurance plans by exploiting fears of premature death. These pitches are best viewed with skepticism. Before buying a policy, consider all sources of income for your children if you were to die while they still needed financial support. Those sources might include:
•the property you leave behind
•Social Security survivor’s benefits, and
•grandparents or other family members.
If you are wealthy or have affluent relatives who would step forward if necessary, you need little or no life insurance. And if, like most folks, you’re struggling to pay for your car’s brake job or your kid’s braces, you can’t afford to (and shouldn’t) divert much of your current income to cope with the fairly remote possibility that you may die prematurely.
With this in mind, you should avoid expensive cash value life insurance (whole life, universal life, variable life) policies that offer a lump sum after a certain period of time (20 or 30 years, for example) or after you reach a certain age (often 65). This lump sum payment is sold as a long-term savings/investment feature; it does nothing to affect how much money will be available to your child if you die in the next few years.
If you’re reasonably young and reasonably healthy, consider purchasing a moderate amount of term insurance, which is the cheapest form of life insurance. Younger parents can obtain a significant amount of coverage for relatively low cost, for the obvious reason that statistically they are unlikely to die soon, so the risk to the insurance company is low. It will provide quick cash for your children if necessary, without draining your bank account now.
Leaving Life Insurance Benefits to Minor Children
If you decide to purchase life insurance for the benefit of your children, you need to arrange some legal means for the proceeds to be managed and supervised by a competent adult. If you don’t, and your children are not legal adults when you die, the court will appoint a property guardian for the children. The process necessitates attorneys’ fees, court proceedings and court supervision of life insurance benefits — costs and hassles that surely won’t help your kids. There are several ways to prevent this:
•Rethink your plan to name minors as beneficiaries of your life insurance policy. Instead, name a trusted adult beneficiary who will use the money for the children’s benefit. If you are confident that this adult will not waver from his or her duty, even years down the line, this might be the easiest option.
•Name your children as policy beneficiaries and name an adult custodian under your state’s Uniform Transfers to Minors Act. Most insurance companies permit this and have forms for it. If you want the proceeds to go to more than one child, you’ll need to specify the percentage each one receives.
•If you have a living trust, name the trustee as the beneficiary of the policy. In the trust document, name the minor children as beneficiaries of any money the trust receives from the insurance policy. Also establish within the trust a method to impose adult management over the proceeds, which can be either a child’s trust or a Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) custodianship. You’ll need to give a copy of your living trust to the insurance company.
Using the UTMA vs. Creating a Child’s Trust
There are a few important differences between leaving life insurance benefits to your children under the UTMA and through a child’s trust:
•Age when proceeds are released. In most states, an UTMA custodian must turn the proceeds over to the child at an age specified by law — 18 or 21 in most states, up to 25 in just a few. In contrast, with a child’s trust, you can specify any age at which your child receives the proceeds.
•Reporting requirements. A trustee for a child’s trust must file yearly income tax returns for the trust. An UTMA custodian need not file tax returns, although the minor must file a yearly return reporting money actually received.
•Tax rates. Trust income tax rates are higher than individual tax rates. Annual income above a certain amount in a child’s trust is taxed at the higher trust tax rates. In contrast, all of the property subject to the UTMA is taxed at the child’s individual tax rate. •Ease of fulfilling property management duties. Because the UTMA is built into state law, financial institutions know about it and are comfortable with it. This should make it easy for the custodian to manage the insurance proceeds on behalf of the child.
Generally speaking, an UTMA custodianship is the most attractive option unless the amount of insurance is very large and the child will need a property manager past the age of 21. The UTMA is simpler to set up and manage — and often cheaper (from a tax point of view) — than a child’s trust. A UTMA custodianship is particularly sensible for proceeds below $100,000. Amounts of this size often are expended fairly rapidly for the child’s education and living needs, and are simply not large enough to tie up beyond the age of 21. If larger amounts are involved and you do not believe the child will be able to responsibly handle the money at the UTMA age limit, a child’s trust is a good bet.