{"id":71794,"date":"2023-01-01T11:25:00","date_gmt":"2023-01-01T11:25:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/businessyield.com\/?p=71794"},"modified":"2023-04-03T10:46:33","modified_gmt":"2023-04-03T10:46:33","slug":"life-insurance-retirement-plan","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/businessyield.com\/bs-personal-finance\/life-insurance-retirement-plan\/","title":{"rendered":"LIFE INSURANCE RETIREMENT PLAN LIRP: How It Works","gt_translate_keys":[{"key":"rendered","format":"text"}]},"content":{"rendered":"
If you’re approaching retirement age, you may be wondering how to maximize your golden years. A life insurance retirement plan is one option to explore. This plan allows you to use the proceeds of your life insurance policy to fund your retirement lifestyle. A universal life or whole life insurance policy can be used to supplement your retirement income, but there are various dangers associated. Find out how a life insurance retirement plan (LIRP) compares to a 401(k) and an IRA. Here’s an example of how it works.<\/p>
A Life Insurance Retirement Plan (LIRP) is a specific life insurance approach that maximizes tax-deferred retirement savings while safeguarding your beneficiaries. These plans are created utilizing permanent life insurance products, with premiums paid each year contributing to two important components: a Life Insurance Death Benefit and a Cash Value savings vehicle.<\/p>
A perpetual life insurance policy is used in the construction of a LIRP, and if the insured dies, the beneficiary receives a tax-free death payment. Life insurance coverage can be established in a variety of ways, including a flat death benefit (constant throughout the policy) or an increasing death benefit.<\/p>
These policies are deemed overfunded, which means that after a portion of the premium is used to meet the insurance expenses of the death benefit, the remainder goes into a cash value savings account. The policyholder can use the cash value savings account, as explained below, to provide eventual retirement income.<\/p>
A savings account known as cash value under the life insurance policy grows tax-free and can be invested in mutual funds, indexes, or fixed-income assets. Tax-favored loans and withdrawals, when properly arranged, can be used to obtain the cash value at a later date, generating a stream of cash flow to be used as retirement income.<\/p>
LIRPs are similar to Roth IRAs in that they are funded with after-tax monies and earnings and payouts are tax-free. However, with a LIRP, the investor pays for life insurance coverage, and it is important for them to have life insurance in order to construct a plan. LIRPs are a popular alternative for many high-income workers who have been phased out of Roth IRAs due to income constraints.<\/p>
LIRPs can supplement your existing retirement plans and fill up the gaps if the stock market falls. If you contribute the maximum amount to your standard investment accounts, you can put any excess funds into your cash value account, giving an additional route for tax-deferred investment development. In a weak year for the stock market, it may be more advantageous to withdraw from a cash value with a guaranteed rate of growth rather than a retirement account with a depreciated value.<\/p>
Some policyholders seek to overfund their cash-value life insurance policies by paying far more than the statutory premium each month in order to accumulate enough cash value to supplement retirement. The extra money customers pay goes towards the cash value of the policy and increases tax-free. However, this technique only works provided you don’t need to make withdrawals before the age of 591: An overfunded cash value policy that exceeds the annual premium maximum (established by the IRS) changes into a modified endowment contract (MEC) and is liable to additional taxes and penalties for withdrawals.<\/p>
Many financial professionals advocate the “4% rule,” which states that you should withdraw no more than 4% of your retirement funds each year. When you own a cash-value life insurance policy, you will have access to the cash value of your policy as well as your retirement savings.<\/p>
This enables you to plan ahead of time for your retirement spending. For example, if the stock market has a bad year, you can withdraw money from your policy’s cash value rather than your IRA, which will refill your IRA savings.<\/p>
A long-term care rider can be added to most life insurance plans, including cash-value policies. If you need to pay for a nursing home or other medical bills connected with aging, this rider gives an expedited death benefit.<\/p>
The majority of the time, a LIRP is appropriate for retirement savers in three situations:<\/p>
The premiums for your permanent life insurance policy are invested in your LIRP, and you can opt to add extra cash to that amount. Permanent life insurance is more expensive than term life insurance; whole life insurance premiums are 5 to 15 times more on average. If cost is your goal, purchasing a term policy and investing the savings from not purchasing a whole-life policy makes more sense than funding a LIRP.<\/p>