Annuities and Heirs

Many clients want to leave a legacy, not just save for a comfortable retirement.

When asked what their most valuable assets are, most clients say their homes or their careers.

While homes and careers are certainly on the short list, after reflection, clients usually agree that their most valuable assets are, in fact, their families, genuine friendships, and time.

As individuals and couples work hard to generate wealth for their own life enjoyment, often with the hope of full retirement in mind, they begin to think about planning to pass a legacy on to their heirs.

(Related: 5 Legacy Planning Basics for New Parents)

For many of our clients, the ability to leave loved ones with financial support is paramount.

Estate planning is complicated, and the rules change frequently. Of course, you should consult with your compliance advisors before talking about legacy planning with your clients. But having a basic understanding of how legacy planning fits in with retirement planning is important to anyone involved with financial services. If you have not yet heard much about the role of annuities in legacy planning, here are some basics to think about.

There are several strategies clients may use to transfer wealth.

Sadly, the most common approach is to have little or no strategy. That means assets pass to heirs through a combination of probate proceedings and any beneficiary designations associated with the consumer’s accounts.

(Related: Don’t Let Your Clients Make the Same Mistake as Aretha Franklin and Prince)

When a wealthy family uses this approach, the difficulties that arise may include a lengthy, expensive estate administration process; legal battles by heirs; unnecessarily high spending on estate taxes; and the possibility that the beneficiaries may be fiscally irresponsible, and may have no help with keeping the inheritance intact.

One legacy wealth transfer strategy involves the use of annuities. That can be a much less time-consuming alternative to extensive trust estate planning.

When I ‘m talking to clients about use of annuities in estate planning, I point out that the contracts come in all shapes and sizes, with various bells and whistles, depending on the insurance carrier, or carriers, being used. But, at their core, I tell clients, annuities are investment products with an insurance wrapper, for a specific purchase benefit.

I explain that annuities purchased for use in wealth transfer can be structured to set up income streams to kids, or even for grandkids, by means of annuities with stretch capabilities. This type of annuity has the following major benefits:

Some annuities allow greater access to principal than others, and many are specifically designed for wealth legacy planning. Some of the control levels available with these annuities are:

These types of benefits allow a client to use tailored annuity products to customize distribution plans for multiple beneficiaries, and to account for considerations such as the beneficiaries’ age, level of fiscal responsibility, and special needs.

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Brian Jarosinski, CFP, ChFC, CASL, RICP, is senior advisor affiliated with the NFP Wealth Team, in Bethesda, Maryland.