Insurance Policy Reviews
A
life insurance review is a necessary part of your estate plan that should be
performed once every three years.
Low interest rates and
widespread changes within the life insurance industry have significantly
impacted the performance of many life insurance contracts and have changed many
of the products currently available on the market.
Never
before has it been more important to undertake a complete analysis of your life
insurance coverage to determine whether existing policies are still appropriate
for long-term needs and if they are performing as projected in the original
illustration when the policy was sold to you (highly unlikely).
An
objective review of your life insurance coverage could reveal essential
information, such as whether:
-
Coverage you currently have is insufficient
or too much,
-
Policies have failed to perform due to
changes in interest rates,
-
Policies are scheduled for a premium
increase,
-
There have been changes in insurer financial
ratings,
-
Newer products might be more cost efficient
or offer better guarantees,
-
Underwriting changes could reduce the cost
of existing coverage,
-
New riders could offer more favorable
features, such as return of premium or guaranteed death benefit protection and,
-
There is the potential to tap into assets
from an existing policy through the use of a Life Settlement.
The purpose of a Life Insurance
Review is not to replace existing insurance. If you have good coverage at a
price that is competitive with the market, the policies should is most cases be
left alone. A Life Insurance Review is part of an ongoing assessment of your
current and future needs. The review will uncover how policies are performing,
an assessment of the number of years that the policy will remain in force based
on current assumptions, and where appropriate, information about alternative
policies. The major problem with older policies (particularly those written
prior to 1997), is that they were illustrating at very high interest rates that
could not possibly be maintained. These policies may have reflected a premium
vanish of say 10 years which due to a drop in interest rates is now more than
20 years.
Over the last few years, new
designs in life insurance, a much more efficient, competitive marketplace,
along with improved mortality have resulted in stronger, more cost effective
products. You may be in a position to benefit from these improvements and
optimize your life insurance coverage.
When the replacement of an existing policy is appropriate, a "1035
Exchange" should be considered. An Internal Revenue Code Section 1035
Exchange refers to a tax-free method of swapping an existing life insurance
policy for another policy with another company. Using a 1035 Exchange, the
contract holder can exchange insurance contracts while preserving the original
policy's tax basis and deferring recognition of any gains for federal income
tax purposes. Lastly, when coverage is no longer necessary, a sale of that
policy in the Life Settlement Market often will return more dollars than a
surrender of the policy for its cash surrender value.
Questions?
If you have any
questions regarding this matter or any other estate planning techniques, please
contact a Maurice Kassimir & Associates, P.C. Trusts & Estates attorney or e-mail us: sklawyers@skpclaw.com.