| Attract,
Retain, and Reward with Executive Bonus Plans
Today, many business owners see the executive
bonus plan as one of the most cost-effective fringe benefit
plans available for solving personal needs in the new millennium.
A quick review will show why.
The Double Bonus Plan
Stripped of all “bells and whistles,”
an executive bonus plan can be provided as an executive-owned
life insurance policy, with premiums paid from the business.
Premiums are generally tax deductible to the business (provided
the premiums are reasonable compensation to the executive,
and the employer is neither a direct nor indirect beneficiary
of the policy), and the executive must report them as taxable
compensation on his or her W-2 form. Since the executive is
responsible for paying the tax on the premiums, it is common
to “gross-up” compensation with an extra bonus
to assist in paying the tax on the premiums. Note, however,
that if the executive’s salary is not “grossed-up,”
annual increases in policy cash values may offset the tax
due. In some instances, the executive may choose to withdraw
or borrow policy values to pay the tax. However, the executive
should consult his or her tax professional as to the possible
tax consequences of any cash withdrawal.
It’s a Win-Win Situation
The executive bonus plan may be advantageous
to both the business and the executive. On one hand, the business
can generally deduct life insurance premiums and has total
discretion in selecting not only who can participate, but
also the amount of premiums and coverage to be provided. On
the other hand, during his or her lifetime, the executive
is free to access the policy’s cash values.
Tax Benefits and Immediate Vesting
The tax-favored status of life insurance
makes it well suited for use in executive bonus plans. Executives
with a need for cash can simply borrow policy values down
to their basis at reasonable interest rates (if the policy
is not a modified endowment contract), without paying income
taxes or the penalties on early withdrawals required by qualified
plans. In addition, the fact that the policy isn’t owned
by the business gives the executive immediate vesting and
100% portability.
If the executive should die, the insurance
carrier pays an income tax-free death benefit directly to
the executive’s chosen beneficiary. In order to prevent
the policy’s death benefit from being subject to estate
tax, the executive may assign policy ownership to a third
party and pay any gift tax due (generally on the cash value
of the policy). If the executive lives for three years after
the transfer and did not retain any incidents of ownership
over the policy, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) generally
excludes the death benefit from the estate.
The executive bonus plan may work best
in C corporations whose owners and executives are in a lower
tax bracket than their corporations. While the executive bonus
plan may not provide sole proprietors, partners, and S corporation
owners with any tax leverage (due to the pass-through nature
of taxation in such entities), it may make perfect sense where
there is a need to attract and retain key executives.
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