Home Breadcrumb caret Insurance Breadcrumb caret Life Customize life insurance for wealthy clients Regular folks worry about debts, mortgages and the ability of their dependants to generate income after they die. October 19, 2011 | Last updated on October 19, 2011 2 min read Plus Icon Image Insure children to ensure wealth transfer If your client has grandchildren, life insurance can transfer wealth from one generation to the next on a tax-advantaged basis. Insuring children with grandchildren as the beneficiaries is a common way to transfer wealth efficiently and effectively through the generations. To make sure the children aren’t stuck paying premiums after your client dies, design a life insurance plan that lets the client to pay premiums up to a certain date (his 70th birthday—presumably before he will pass away), or for a limited amount of time (the next ten years). Or, have your client purchase an annuity lasting the entire length of the life insurance policy with payout amounts that cover the premiums. Use life insurance for retirement planning The tax-exempt accumulation of cash in a life insurance policy can function like an RRSP on steroids. When your client retires, he can access the funds through a collateral assignment of the policy to a lending institution for a tax-free loan to supplement retirement needs. See this strategy in action. Read this month’s case study, Help clients access RRSP funds and save tax from September’s Advisor’s Edge. HAVE YOU GIVEN THOUGHT TO YOUR LEGACY? $1.2 billion The amount paid in claims each week to Canadians 95 The number of life and health insurance companies in Canada Source: CLHIA Save Stroke 1 Print Print Group 8 Share LI logo Use charitable life insurance to trigger a tax receipt Charitable life insurance can fund a bequest and trigger a large charitable tax receipt when the client passes away. You can enact a life insurance policy that names a client’s charity of choice as beneficiary, so the insurance contract proceeds pay for the charitable bequest, instead of money from the client’s estate. Insure children to ensure wealth transfer If your client has grandchildren, life insurance can transfer wealth from one generation to the next on a tax-advantaged basis. Insuring children with grandchildren as the beneficiaries is a common way to transfer wealth efficiently and effectively through the generations. To make sure the children aren’t stuck paying premiums after your client dies, design a life insurance plan that lets the client to pay premiums up to a certain date (his 70th birthday—presumably before he will pass away), or for a limited amount of time (the next ten years). Or, have your client purchase an annuity lasting the entire length of the life insurance policy with payout amounts that cover the premiums. Use life insurance for retirement planning The tax-exempt accumulation of cash in a life insurance policy can function like an RRSP on steroids. When your client retires, he can access the funds through a collateral assignment of the policy to a lending institution for a tax-free loan to supplement retirement needs. See this strategy in action. Read this month’s case study, Help clients access RRSP funds and save tax from September’s Advisor’s Edge. HAVE YOU GIVEN THOUGHT TO YOUR LEGACY? $1.2 billion The amount paid in claims each week to Canadians 95 The number of life and health insurance companies in Canada Source: CLHIA