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Writing A Policy In Trust

Information

In the event of your death or diagnosis with a terminal illness your life insurance provider will make a payout to your survivors called the 'sum assured'. Unless you nominate a specific person to receive this sum, it will become a part of your estate.

Your estate is essentially everything that you leave behind when you die; including your home, savings and debts. If the total value of your estate exceeds the government-determined inheritance limit, your survivors will have to pay inheritance tax on the money they receive.

For the period 2011-12 the inheritance tax threshold is £325,000: if your total estate exceeds this amount, your survivors will have to pay 40% tax on the excess. However, if you are married or in a civil partnership, you automatically qualify for a joint inheritance allowance of £650,000. This means that when the first partner dies and their estate passes to their partner, their partner is then able to pass their joint estate, with a value of up to £650,000, to their children or other surviving family members when they die: inheritance tax free.

Potential Issues If Policy Not Written In Trust

  • The sum assured your insurer pays out can be substantial, and added to the value of your home and other savings it is likely that the total value of your estate will exceed the inheritance tax threshold, leaving your survivors with a large tax bill.
  • In addition, it is common for your survivors to be left waiting for a considerable length of time before the necessary administration is completed on your estate. If your survivors are in dire need of financial assistance following your death, and the loss of your income, this delay can create monetary difficulties.

Solution

However, there is a way to reduce the tax bill and ensure that the payment is straightforward.

  • Writing a life insurance policy 'in trust' means that the pay-out is omitted from the total estate calculation. Firstly, the inheritance tax bill may be greatly reduced, or even eliminated, when the value of the estate is reduced.
  • Additionally, writing your policy 'in trust' ensures that the money is paid promptly and to a person you nominate, without any need to refer to your Last Will and Testament. You may specify exactly who will receive the pay-out and, if it should be made to more than one person, how much each beneficiary should receive.

Our Advisers will offer you the choice of writing your policy in trust. It is very easy to arrange, usually requiring only a few extra forms, and it will be at no extra cost.

There is nothing to lose by writing your policy 'in trust', especially considering the possible inheritance tax bill that your survivors may otherwise have to pay on the proceeds of the policy. Even if you have already taken out a life insurance policy, it is usually still possible for it to be placed 'in trust': there are no rules that say that this must be done initially.

Vita Financial is a trading style of Vita Financial Limited, which is an appointed representative of Intrinsic Independent Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. Intrinsic Independent Limited is entered on the FSA Register (http://www.fsa.gov.uk/register/home.do) under reference 217742. The guidance and/or advice contained within this website is subject to the UK regulatory regime, and is therefore targeted at consumers based in the UK.