Another day, another headline. We see them throughout the industry. Especially in the years following the passing of the Secure Act. I will paraphrase and summarize for you as directly as I can… IRAs are terrible financial instruments to pass wealth to the next generation.
Why?
Our clients come to us seeking controlled outcomes in volatile situations. They seek protection from the market. They seek predictable income. And increasingly lately, they seek shelter from Washington. Specifically, they want protection from tax risk.
And with legacy assets, risk is all around. When assets are passed to a spouse, the surviving spouse must now file on a new form. And that new form has a new table. And the tax rates on that new table are much higher than the previous table in the previous form. We call that the Widow’s Penalty. And for many savers, depending on their income levels, this can represent a 27-42% increase in their effective tax rate. Wow.
Even if the money is going to the kids, you still have situational tax risk. It just comes in a different way. When the kids inherit money, they often do so at their peak earning years. Now, with the Secure Act, they must assume taxation of that money within 10 years. With an established effective tax rate, this additional money all comes at the margins. So, when weighing the potential tax burden for heirs, I tend to use their marginal tax rate. Or in some cases, higher. We call this one the Kiddo’s Penalty.
As you can see, this tax risk has nothing to do with Washington. This is just a case of paying higher taxes because of their specific situation.
Of course, Washington can play a role too. We call that "legislative risk." This is the risk that Congress changes the rules on taxation, and those rule changes lead to much higher taxes for our heirs. With our deficit spending adding trillions of dollars every year to the national debt, at some point, WE will have to pay.
For legacy assets specifically, this presents an opportunity for some planning. Especially for those assets sitting in IRAs and continuing to grow, but also compounding the inherent tax problem. With RMDs set to wreak havoc on tax rates and those dreaded income-related taxes like IRMAA, Social Security taxation, and capital gains and dividend taxes.
Many retirees who have a portion of their retirement savings earmarked for legacy are now considering some advanced tax planning strategies like Roth conversions and life insurance.
Those retirees are faced with choices:
Let’s take a quick look at each option:
Option 1 | Roth Conversion:
Pros: Long-term savings on taxes, IRMAA and other income-related taxes.
Cons: The expense of paying those conversion taxes and additional IRMAA surcharges during the conversion. For some clients, it may take years to “break even” on the conversion. Meaning, it may take years to recoup the lost buying power of the money spent on taxes. Leaving many savers begging the question, “Are Roth conversions worth it?”
Option 2 | Life Insurance:
Wait, what? I thought life insurance was only for younger savers. Actually, many retirees now see the most efficient way to pass wealth to the next generation is to use the financial instrument that was designed specifically for this purpose.
Pros: The death benefit provides an immediate legacy multiplier, making break-even on the cost of conversion on Day 1.
Cons: if the client lives a long, healthy life, over time, with moderate returns, the account value of the IRA or Roth could grow higher than the death benefit of the life policy.
Option 3 | Keep the IRA:
Some savers just can’t stomach paying the taxes on a conversion.
Pros: No cost of conversion.
Cons: From both a financial and emotional standpoint, rarely is this the best option, as tax risk, legislative risk, IRMAA, and other pressures continue to mount.
So, how do we help our clients decide what to do? This is where Stonewood Financial’s Legacy Done Right software comes into play. This analysis will help you calculate, based on your clients’ specific income situation and their heirs’ specific tax rates, a year-by-year analysis of three things:
With this analysis, you get a picture of the cost of conversion and can compare that to the cost of deferral. And then the year-by-year analysis gives you an annual look at what the total wealth generated would be in each scenario, based on whether that money was passed to the heirs in that given year. Thus, a true picture of which instrument would deliver the greatest after-tax legacy.
Let’s take a look at the options clients face with legacy planning, with a hypothetical example of a 75-year-old widow with $1M in an IRA. She has her income needs taken care of through Social Security and an annuity that provides guaranteed lifetime income. The IRA is going to her kids.
Let’s say her effective tax rate is just over 14%. And she lives in Florida, so there is no state income tax. Her only child, currently at a 20% effective tax rate, lives back in Kentucky, which has a 3.5% income tax.
Like many savers, let’s assume she fears taxes could be on the rise. So her advisor would like to model a tax increase in 7 years that gets tax rates back to their pre-TCJA rates. It’s going to take a 30% increase in taxes to get us there. A net 6% growth rate was assumed on all IRA and Roth money.
Using Legacy Done Right, we looked at three options:
In this hypothetical example, the cost of conversion would be about $260,000 of income taxes and another $40,000 of IRMAA surcharges. This leaves $700,000 to fund the life insurance policy over 5 years. I ran sample illustrations with multiple carriers, and most protection-focused IUL illustrations with long-term care riders showed about $1.2M in death benefit in a scenario like this. And projected accumulation from the indexing strategy would keep that death benefit in place through age 100.
As you can see from the chart below, the comparison from IRA to Roth to life insurance is an intriguing one.
Analysis generated by Stonewood Financial Legacy Done Right software. For the complete report, including assumptions used, please contact our office.
So, let’s unpack the results:
Results like this get me thinking. What if we changed the conversation?
Instead of pitting the three financial instruments against each other, what if we instead compared the decision to convert or not convert? The decision to take action vs. not take action. What if the solution were a BLEND of both a Roth conversion and life insurance?
For this example, let’s assume a 50/50 blended rate. That means half of the conversion assets end up in a Roth IRA, and the other half funds a life policy. The life insurance death benefit in this case would be about half the previous amount: around $600k.
Here are the results from this blended approach:
Analysis generated by Stonewood Financial Legacy Done Right software. For the complete report, including assumptions used, please contact our office.
The results are staggering. No longer do we have to defend the expense of conversion. No longer do we have to defend IRA performance, catching up to the life insurance death benefit value.
Suddenly, we now have a completely compelling case for action. In all scenarios, the benefit of conversion is immediately shown and continues throughout. Thanks to Legacy Done Right, you as an advisor can deliver a checklist of value to your clients. For this saver:
Obviously, this is just one case. But I’ve found that blending the Roth conversion with a life insurance policy, especially when dealing with legacy assets, can be an extremely powerful combination. If you would like to learn more about this strategy, connect with our Stonewood team or watch our most recent webinar on executing this strategy.