
The most important thing about term life insurance is to make sure you have a lot of it (seven figures) in place if anyone besides you depends on your income. If that is not the case for you, contact a WCI-approved agent TODAY and get this critical insurance in place.
However, it's worth taking a second to think about what should be done with that money in the unfortunate event that the policy should actually pay out. Thus, a reader question came in via email:
“I had an interesting conversation with my wife this morning, and we were left perplexed. We've been talking about life insurance and what would happen if I die tomorrow. We have a $3 million policy on me. My wife asked me, ‘So where should I put the money to make interest?' That's where I couldn't give her a good answer. I understand the basics—cover debts (of which we have none aside from mortgage), pay for college, etc. Once we get beyond that, where is the best/safest place to put the money so it generates interest without principal being at great risk? It will cover costs in part by the interest it generates, thereby making it last longer than if she had to just draw down the principal (which is how we had conceptualized it in our head originally).
In my readings, I've seen annuities (the life insurance company effectively acting like a savings account and generating interest). I also considered savings accounts, but there are potential issues with FDIC protection limits, and while the interest rates are relatively decent now, I remember just a year or two ago when even high yield savings accounts yielded only 0.5%. I've also seen recommendations for CDs and investing in all sorts of stuff (which comes with risk obviously). My goal is to make sure the money lasts a long, long time. This is a very different discussion now than it would be 20 years from now when my retirement accounts (which I have maxed out for a decade) are a lot larger than they are now. What should I tell her?”
What Is the Plan?
When buying life insurance, you need a plan. What is the money supposed to do if the insured dies? Is it supposed to buy out the dead business partner's heirs so the remaining partners can carry on operations? Is it supposed to pay off the house? Is it supposed to cover a college education? Is it supposed to send the remaining spouse back to school for a few years so they can have higher earnings? Or, as is the case for most doctors married to stay-at-home spouses or low earners, is it supposed to ensure their financial life is exactly the same as it would be if the insured were still alive? Given the multi-million dollar policy, I suspect the goal is the latter.
More information here:
Preparing for Tragedy: Ensuring Your Partner Can Manage Without You
Savings + Life Insurance Benefit = Nest Egg
There are two issues to bear in mind here.
First, you don't need an amount of life insurance equal to everything you will ever earn or even everything you will ever spend. As the emailer so astutely noted: over the long run, the money will grow in value due to interest, dividends, rents, and/or capital gains—just like any other pot of money.
Second, term life insurance simply makes up the difference between the amount already saved for retirement and the amount needed to live the rest of your life. Safe withdrawal rate studies suggest that a nest egg 25 times what you spend in a year will last 30 years with very high reliability. Truthfully, any sum of money that can last 30 years is awfully similar to the sum of money that would last indefinitely. In essence, your savings plus the death benefit simply needs to equal “your number.” If you need $5 million to retire today and have $1 million now, you need a $4 million term life policy.
Sample Plan
This doctor has been maxing out retirement accounts for 10 years. He is probably now a millionaire. Let's say he has $1 million saved toward a nest egg and estimates his “number” to be something like $3 million, especially if there is no mortgage and if college savings are not an issue. There is a $600,000 mortgage and he wants $100,000 in 529s for each of his four kids.
So, the first million of that $3 million death benefit goes to the mortgage and 529s. The other millions get invested in a taxable account. Between the taxable account and the retirement accounts, there is now $3 million and his wife can live the rest of her life on that.
More information here:
Is Whole Life Insurance Worth It?
How to Invest in Very Early Retirement
In essence, it's as though she retired very, very early. There is no Social Security or Medicare to help for many decades. Inflation will pop up from time to time during her 50-70 year retirement. She may want a little less aggressive asset allocation than was being used previously, but she will still need a substantial portion of the portfolio invested into risky assets such as stocks and real estate to keep up with inflation. It cannot all be put into CDs and savings accounts, and it should not all be put into an annuity, especially one that is not indexed to inflation. She has to take risk with the investments. Not taking those risks just isn't an option.
If she can earn some money from time to time over the next 30 or 40 years, that will allow her to spend even more. She will need to keep an eye on the portfolio and manage it carefully. If she is not capable of or interested in managing a multi-million dollar portfolio, she will need to hire an asset manager who offers good service and advice at a fair price. For the first few months (or even the first year), she should not make any major decisions or investments, just like someone who won the lottery. Meeting with a good financial planner is a great idea. Talking about how to manage money before she needs to do it on her own is also a great idea. This is one reason why managing money together is so important. If she remarries, a pre-nuptial agreement is mandatory.
Insurance benefit money spends exactly like saved money and earned money. There is no reason to think about it any differently.
Have more questions about life insurance and what kind of policies would be best for you? Hire a WCI-vetted professional to help you sort it out.
What do you think? What is your spending and investing plan for life insurance proceeds should you or your spouse keel over?
The White Coat Investor may receive compensation from White Coat Insurance Services, LLC; licensed in all states including MA and DC; CA license #6009217; NY license #1758759 (exp. 6/2025); Registered address: 10610 S. Jordan Gateway, #200 South Jordan, UT 84095. This does not affect the cost or coverage of insurance.
Regarding not having Social Security to help, isn’t there SS Survivors Benefits? Depending how many kids you have, it does max out at a certain amount. Someone correct me if I am wrong but with 1 child, the surviving spouse gets something around ~$4k/month. You’re not exactly living large but it’s also not insignificant.
Yes, it’s a meaningful amount until the kid turns 16. Then it goes away.
For someone who is truly clueless about investing, putting all the life insurance proceeds into something like a LifeStrategy moderate fund would be a decent option.
It’s not as tax efficient in a taxable account as separate funds, but in the long run the person would still come out way ahead compared to using a typical financial planner who charges the typical fees. There’s a great Bogleheads thread by user Longinvest discussing a default one fund portfolio such as this.
MIL 80 then invested all FIL’s life insurance proceeds in bank/ CU regular accounts- we DID successfully convince her to avoid USAA’s push she get an annuity with that policy, and to have money markets for a good part of it. We got her to put maybe 20% of it into CDs (12 month maximum!!!!), and nowadays another 50% is earning interest over 0.3% for a few months anyway. BoA absolutely loves that she insists her checking account with them- 0% interest- must have 30 months worth of expenses (and gets more than she spends each month from her various pensions and SS direct deposited each month). When interest rates on CDs topped out at 1% we were sad she missed out on a few $100s each month, now missing out on a couple thousand a month is truly maddening. Even spouse, not interested in money, asks ‘if she dies we put it all in CDs or what?’ (answer of course is no, mixed stock/ bond for us 60 somethings unlike 80+ MIL for whom no stocks at all is not insane). Speaking of insane, occasionally I wonder if we can take over her finances for her because it’s insane to avoid earning safe interest on it… No, anxiety and paranoia is part of her lifelong makeup, we should never exacerbate her worries above her baseline fear of everyone’s motives: she can afford to miss out on $20K/year anyway. Have to wait until/ if ever she is truly demented and unaware to do what we can’t convince her to do now. And on the bright side, she’s no longer storing cash in the wall or safety deposit box. (A family joke is that maybe she and FIL were actually bank robbers…)
Further of course she is very careful with her money. Time to buy another bottle of fine liquor for the retirement village salesman who sweet talked her into moving into a place she really enjoys. We certainly couldn’t have done it- there was a buy-in! And gives her adult grandkids total 1/10 % of her savings yearly as birthday gifts. We’re already giving them maybe ½% of our fortune in our 6th decade. As I tell spouse, first thing to do if he inherits what she has now is give a good portion of it straight to the kids, perhaps by disclaiming part of the inheritance. And in the mean time applaud if she ever actually spends any money on herself.
But I’m probably still salty she once said she fears I’ll steal from her when I was giving her money advice- which is why I no longer do- and now she knows anything her son advises is guided by my money skills so she doesn’t trust his advice either. (But I gotta admit an older person should never trust anyone; likeliest thieves from the elderly are family members. I don’t trust anyone now with all our fortune, will I when I’m her age?)
I found a small error in the article above. Opening paragraph, second sentence, I believe it should read “If that is (delete not) the case for you…”. This rarely happens with your superb editing crew, but thought I would point it out to you. Thanks for all you do Jim!
Thank you for helping us communicate clearly. I just read through that paragraph again and it still seems fine to me. Can you suggest a better way to write it that would be more clear?
The most important thing about term life insurance is to make sure you have a lot of it (seven figures) in place if anyone besides you depends on your income. If that is not the case for you, contact a WCI-approved agent TODAY and get this critical insurance in place.
What I’m trying to say is that if you need insurance and don’t have it, you should call someone and get it. I think you read the “that” applying to “anyone besides you depends on your income” and I meant it to apply to “make sure you have a lot of it.”
You are right. I misread it. Thanks for the clarification. It is weird how the brain works sometimes reading and interpreting text. Thanks for the feedback.
ILIT structure is possible with term policies? As explained to me it Takes proceeds out of taxable estate and provides asset protection if heirs become divorced or at fault in an auto accident or other untoward event
Yes, it’s possible. I’ll bet it’s done more frequently with a permanent policy though.
Yes, irrevocable trusts can be useful in reducing estate tax and in asset protection.