When the insurance is no longer needed in the retirement plan there are different ways it can be removed from the plan. If it is simply transferred to the insured participant it will be a taxable distribution and the participant will pay tax on the value of the policy when it is transferred. To avoid a taxable distribution, the policy can be bought by the participant with outside funds to replace the value of the policy in the retirement plan. Either way, once the policy is outside the retirement plan, the new owner/insured may use the policy to take distributions providing retirement income outside the retirement plan or maintain cash in the policy to maintain a higher death benefit. If these distributions from the policy are managed correctly, they will not be subject to income tax.
March 3, 2020
More Articles
RBC Sets 12-Month S&P 500 Target At 7,750 As More Wall Street Firms Turn Bullish On Stocks
RBC Capital Markets has become the latest Wall Street firm to signal confidence in US stocks, establishing a new 12-month price target for the S&P 500
From Account-Level Chaos to Household-Level Clarity: SS&C Black Diamond Wealth Solutions’ Rebalancer
Rebalancing doesn’t have to be painful. Jerry Barrs, Senior Product Manager at SS&C Black Diamond Wealth Solutions, explains how the company’s Rebalancer shifts portfolio management from account-level spreadsheets to household-focused automation. With upcoming UMA capabilities that will structure sleeves around client goals—retirement, education, vacation homes—rather than just asset classes, SS&C Black Diamond is rethinking what wealth management technology should enable advisors to do.