My Life Insurance Company has offered me an "Enhanced Cash Surrender Value". The Cash Surrender Value is $50,000, but if I surrender it within the next 90 days, they will pay me $100,000 (twice that CSV). They are trying to get in on the Life Settlement business by beating them to it with a good offer so I don't go out and settle the policy. I know my tax basis in the policy is $40,000.
If I "sold the policy" to a third party for $100,000 I understand that I'd have ordinary income of $10,000 ($50,000 CSV-$40,000 basis) and a Capital Gain of $50,000 (the $100,00 sale price minus the CSV). If I accept the company's identical $100,000 "Enhanced CSV" offer, do I have $60,000 of ordinary income? Or would the increase associated with the Enhanced CSV be treated as a capital gain to give me the same result? Do get a different tax result depending on whether I sell the policy to a third party or back to the original company?
Plus, can I offset any capital gain from this against carried over capital losses from investment activities?
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TCJA returned the tax treatment of a life settlement to what it had been widely believed to be prior to a 2009 ruling. A policyholder who sells a policy in a life settlement is generally taxed in three tiers as follows:
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so it would not matter whther you sell to the insurane company or a 3rd party. simply put you are lppoking for the most cash.. ehat the company offfers will probably differ differ froma LSC which may differ from each other. Life settlement companies may have restricions on what policies they will buy. here's one example
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One of the first questions that should be addressed about taxation of life settlement proceeds is the health status of the insured who’s selling the policy.
If the insured is terminally ill, which means they have a life expectancy of fewer than two years, the settlement proceeds will be tax-free.
Technically, the transaction will be called a viatical settlement if the insured is terminally ill, and this has a different tax treatment from a life settlement transaction.
The IRS defines a terminally ill person as “someone who has been certified by a physician as having an illness or physical condition that can reasonably be expected to result in death in 24 months or less after the certification date.”
In addition, if the insured is chronically ill, the settlement proceeds may not be taxed.
The IRS defines a chronically ill individual as “someone who has been certified (at least annually) by a licensed health care practitioner as being unable to perform, without substantial assistance from another individual, at least two daily living activities (eating, toileting, transferring, bathing, dressing, and continence) for at least 90 days due to a loss of functional capacity.”
Or a person “requiring substantial supervision to protect the individual from threats to health and safety due to severe cognitive impairment.”
The settlement proceeds will not be taxed if the insured is terminally ill or chronically ill by IRS standards.
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any capital gains can be used to offset capital losses from other sources.
TCJA returned the tax treatment of a life settlement to what it had been widely believed to be prior to a 2009 ruling. A policyholder who sells a policy in a life settlement is generally taxed in three tiers as follows:
*******************
so it would not matter whther you sell to the insurane company or a 3rd party. simply put you are lppoking for the most cash.. ehat the company offfers will probably differ differ froma LSC which may differ from each other. Life settlement companies may have restricions on what policies they will buy. here's one example
********************************
One of the first questions that should be addressed about taxation of life settlement proceeds is the health status of the insured who’s selling the policy.
If the insured is terminally ill, which means they have a life expectancy of fewer than two years, the settlement proceeds will be tax-free.
Technically, the transaction will be called a viatical settlement if the insured is terminally ill, and this has a different tax treatment from a life settlement transaction.
The IRS defines a terminally ill person as “someone who has been certified by a physician as having an illness or physical condition that can reasonably be expected to result in death in 24 months or less after the certification date.”
In addition, if the insured is chronically ill, the settlement proceeds may not be taxed.
The IRS defines a chronically ill individual as “someone who has been certified (at least annually) by a licensed health care practitioner as being unable to perform, without substantial assistance from another individual, at least two daily living activities (eating, toileting, transferring, bathing, dressing, and continence) for at least 90 days due to a loss of functional capacity.”
Or a person “requiring substantial supervision to protect the individual from threats to health and safety due to severe cognitive impairment.”
The settlement proceeds will not be taxed if the insured is terminally ill or chronically ill by IRS standards.
*******************************
any capital gains can be used to offset capital losses from other sources.
If they will buy you out at 2x cash value, you obviously have a valuable policy.
The insurance company will always try to get you to give up a favorable policy for a less favorable policy.
That's what they do.
Thanks. I appreciate your help.
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