Skip to main content
Life Insurance Planning Changes After the Big Beautiful Tax Act
Guest Expert: Alan Gassman, J.D., LL.M. and Barry Flagg, CFP®, CLU, ChFC
Date:
Attendee's Excellent Rating: 82%
Bookmark
Webinar Replay Description

Click Here to Download Summary Below

1. The Changing Role of Life Insurance

  • Many clients originally purchased life insurance to cover federal estate taxes.
  • With the new higher federal exemptions under the Tax Act, many of those policies may no longer serve their original purpose.
  • Advisors should ask: Does this policy still make economic sense? If not for estate taxes, can it be repurposed for wealth accumulation, asset protection, or long-term care planning?

📖 Reference: IRS – Estate and Gift Tax FAQs


2. Evaluating Policies: Costs Matter

  • Life insurance enjoys unique tax benefits:
    • Tax-free death benefit (IRC §101(a))
    • Tax-deferred cash value accumulation
    • Tax-free withdrawals up to basis + policy loans
  • But not all policies are structured for accumulation. Guaranteed universal life, for example, typically provides death benefit protection, not strong cash growth.
  • Advisors must evaluate costs, performance, and risk—not just illustrations. FINRA, the OCC, and the Society of Actuaries all warn that relying solely on illustrations is misleading.

📖 Reference: FINRA – Life Insurance Basics


3. Financing and Ownership Structures

  • Premium Financing: Works only when policy costs are less than ~200 basis points below expected returns. Otherwise, it’s high risk.
  • Private vs. Third-Party Financing: Clients can lend to their own ILITs (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts) as a safer financing strategy.
  • Asset Protection: In many states (e.g., Florida, Texas, New York), life insurance cash value is 100% creditor-protected. Swapping policies for other assets can strengthen protection strategies.

📖 Reference: NAIC – Life Insurance and Asset Protection


4. Repurposing Strategies

  • 1035 Exchanges: Policies can be exchanged into:
    • Private Placement Life Insurance (PPLI): Best suited for clients investing $1M+/yr who want hedge fund/alternative strategies wrapped tax-efficiently.
    • Hybrid LTC Policies: Growing in popularity, combining life insurance with long-term care riders. Standalone LTC policies are shrinking due to pricing challenges.
  • Modified Endowment Contracts (MECs): Can provide tax-deferred growth, though distributions are less favorable.

📖 Reference: IRS – 1035 Exchanges
📖 Reference: AALTCI – LTC Insurance Trends


5. Trusts and Estate Planning Opportunities

  • ILITs (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts): Even if not needed for estate tax, ILITs can be repurposed as:
    • Non-grantor trusts for income shifting to lower-bracket beneficiaries.
    • Vehicles to own high-tax assets (e.g., real estate with property taxes or bonds), preserving deductions.
    • Tools for basis planning using techniques like the reciprocal trust doctrine or powers of appointment.
  • State Taxes: Even without federal estate tax, state-level inheritance taxes (e.g., PA, NY) remain relevant.

📖 Reference: Nolo – ILIT Basics


6. Life Settlements and Policy Sales

  • Unwanted policies can sometimes be sold in the secondary market.
  • Policies on insureds within ~10 years of life expectancy (often 70s–80s) may have surprising value.
  • Advisors should avoid one-off buyers and instead run auctions to maximize sale price.

📖 Reference: SEC – Investor Bulletin on Life Settlements


7. Advisor Action Steps

  • Review every in-force policy: Is it still serving its intended purpose post-Tax Act?
  • Run the numbers: Model scenarios using tools like EstateView and Veralytic to test policy cost efficiency and estate impact.
  • Repurpose trusts: ILITs and QPRTs may now be more valuable for income tax and asset protection than for estate tax.
  • Educate clients: Explain why some policies should be retained, exchanged, sold, or placed on “hold” until 2030, when exemptions may sunset.

📖 Reference: Urban Institute – Estate Tax Policy


Bottom Line for Financial Advisors:
The Tax Act has shifted the conversation from “Do you need life insurance for estate taxes?” to “How can we maximize the economic and planning value of existing policies and trusts?” Advisors should guide clients in evaluating costs, leveraging creditor protection, exploring exchanges, and using trusts creatively to meet today’s planning challenges.

 

Attendees Comments:

A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

I learned about life insurance in the context of estate planning. In particular the various options for life insurance policies given the increase in the estate exemption.
- Mark Z.

The Veralytic concept was new for me and that is very interesting. I have attended some of Alan's webinars in the past, but I really liked the back and forth between Alan and Barry today, as I felt like it helped me understand the concepts through the specific case examples.
- Stephanie L.

Cost of insurance versus benefit and the necessity of insurance
- Paul P.

missy@financia…

Wed, 09/24/2025 - 11:06

Comments
A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

I learned about life insurance in the context of estate planning. In particular the various options for life insurance policies given the increase in the estate exemption.
- Mark Z.

The Veralytic concept was new for me and that is very interesting. I have attended some of Alan's webinars in the past, but I really liked the back and forth between Alan and Barry today, as I felt like it helped me understand the concepts through the specific case examples.
- Stephanie L.

Cost of insurance versus benefit and the necessity of insurance
- Paul P.
Life Insurance Planning Changes After the Big Beautiful Tax Act 09-23-2025