How Florida Families Use Life Insurance for Estate Planning
Learn how Florida families use life insurance, ILITs, and IUL policies for tax-free wealth transfer and multigenerational estate planning strategies.
Estate planning isn't just for the ultra-wealthy. Every Florida family that wants to leave something behind for the next generation needs a plan, and life insurance is often the most efficient tool in that plan. I've helped families across Southwest Florida use life insurance to transfer wealth, protect assets, and create legacies that last for generations. Here's how it works.
Why Life Insurance Is the Foundation of Estate Planning
Life insurance provides something no other financial product can: an immediate, guaranteed, tax-free lump sum at exactly the moment your family needs it most. When a loved one passes away, there are bills to pay, a mortgage to cover, a business to keep running, and an estate to settle. Life insurance provides the liquidity to handle all of that without forcing your family to sell assets at the worst possible time.
Beyond the practical necessity, life insurance is one of the most tax-efficient ways to transfer wealth. The death benefit passes to your beneficiaries income-tax-free under Section 101(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. For large estates, when structured properly through an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust, the proceeds can also be estate-tax-free. That combination is incredibly powerful.
Understanding Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs)
An Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust, or ILIT, is a trust specifically designed to own a life insurance policy outside of your taxable estate. When you pass away, the death benefit is paid to the trust, not to you or your estate. Because the trust owns the policy, the proceeds aren't included in your estate for federal estate tax purposes.
The federal estate tax exemption for 2025 is $13.61 million per individual or $27.22 million for married couples. That sounds like a lot, but here's the critical detail: this exemption is set to be cut roughly in half at the end of 2025 when the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act sunsets. If that happens, the exemption could drop to around $7 million per person. For successful Florida families, that's a threshold that's not as far away as you might think, especially when you add up your home, retirement accounts, business interests, and other assets.
An ILIT protects the insurance proceeds from estate taxes regardless of what happens to the exemption. It's a strategy that costs relatively little to set up but can save your family hundreds of thousands or even millions in taxes.
Using IUL for Estate Planning
Indexed Universal Life insurance is particularly well-suited for estate planning because it combines a permanent death benefit with cash value growth. The cash value grows tax-deferred and can be accessed tax-free during your lifetime, while the death benefit provides the wealth transfer vehicle for the next generation.
Here's a strategy I use with many of my Florida clients. A 55-year-old couple funds an IUL policy with $50,000 per year for 10 years. During their lifetime, the cash value grows and provides a supplemental retirement income source through tax-free policy loans. When they pass away, the death benefit, which might be $1.5 million to $2 million, passes to their children or an ILIT completely income-tax-free. The total premiums paid were $500,000, but the family receives three to four times that amount in tax-free proceeds.
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Florida offers several unique advantages for estate planning. First, Florida has no state estate tax and no state inheritance tax. That means the only estate tax your family faces is the federal estate tax, and with proper planning, you can minimize or eliminate that too.
Second, Florida's homestead protection laws are among the strongest in the country. Your primary residence is protected from most creditors, and there are special rules about how homestead property passes to surviving family members. Life insurance complements this protection by providing liquid assets that your family can use without touching the homestead.
Third, Florida's trust-friendly laws make it an excellent state for establishing ILITs and other trust structures. Many families from other states even move their trusts to Florida to take advantage of our favorable legal environment.
Equalizing Inheritance Among Heirs
Life insurance is also invaluable when you need to equalize inheritance among your children. Let's say you own a business worth $2 million and you want to leave it to the child who works in the business. But you have two other children who you love equally. A $2 million life insurance policy can provide an equivalent inheritance to each of the other children, ensuring fairness without forcing the sale of the business.
I see this situation frequently with Florida families who own businesses, real estate portfolios, or other illiquid assets. Life insurance provides the liquidity to make the estate plan work for everyone.
The Cost of Waiting
One thing I always tell families: the best time to start estate planning was 10 years ago. The second best time is today. Life insurance premiums are based on your age and health, and they only go up over time. A policy that costs $500 per month at age 50 might cost $1,200 per month at age 60 and may not be available at all at age 70 if health issues arise.
Estate planning with life insurance works best when you start early, fund the policy consistently, and let the cash value compound over time. Don't wait until it's too late or too expensive.
Key takeaway: Life insurance is the cornerstone of effective estate planning for Florida families. Whether through an ILIT for estate tax protection, an IUL for combined retirement and wealth transfer benefits, or a simple death benefit for inheritance equalization, the right policy can ensure your family's legacy is protected for generations to come.