Life Insurance Trusts (ILIT) in New York

An irrevocable life insurance trust removes your policy's death benefit from your taxable estate — transforming a potentially estate-taxable asset into a tax-free legacy. Morgan Legal Group designs and administers ILITs for New York families throughout the metropolitan area.

Why Life Insurance Needs Its Own Trust in New York

Life insurance is one of the most tax-efficient assets you can own — death benefits are received income-tax free by the beneficiary under IRC §101(a). But for New York clients with taxable estates, a critical problem arises: if you own your life insurance policy at death, the entire death benefit is included in your gross estate for both federal and New York estate tax purposes under IRC §2042. A $5 million policy on a New York resident's life can generate an estate tax bill of over $1.5 million — dramatically reducing the benefit that was supposed to protect the family.

An irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) solves this problem elegantly. By having the trust — not you — own the life insurance policy, the death benefit passes entirely outside your taxable estate. The trust receives the proceeds income-tax free and estate-tax free, and distributes to your beneficiaries according to the terms you specified when you created the trust. The result: the full face value of your life insurance passes to your family without a dollar of estate tax.

Russel Morgan, Esq. has designed and administered ILITs for New York clients across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau, Westchester, and Suffolk counties for more than two decades. Beyond the basic estate tax exclusion, a well-designed ILIT can also serve as an estate liquidity vehicle — providing the cash needed to pay estate taxes on illiquid assets — and as a vehicle for ongoing asset protection for beneficiaries who are minors, spendthrifts, or at risk from creditors.

What an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust Provides

Life Insurance Trusts (ILIT) — Your Questions Answered

What is an ILIT and why do New York estate planners use them?
An irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) is an irrevocable trust that owns one or more life insurance policies on the grantor's life. Because the trust owns the policy, the death benefit is not included in the grantor's taxable estate under IRC §2042, provided the grantor has no 'incidents of ownership' and has not transferred the policy within three years of death. For New York clients with taxable estates, this can save substantial estate taxes: a $5 million death benefit owned outside the estate and received by an ILIT passes to beneficiaries free of estate tax, while the same benefit received by the estate could trigger hundreds of thousands of dollars in New York and federal estate taxes. The grantor creates the irrevocable trust, names beneficiaries, and makes annual cash gifts to the trust. The trustee uses those funds to pay the insurance premiums. Upon the grantor's death, the death benefit passes income-tax free and estate-tax free to the trust, which then distributes to or holds for the benefit of the named beneficiaries. The ILIT can also provide the estate with liquidity through a loan or purchase of estate assets to pay estate taxes, even while the death benefit itself stays outside the estate. Russel Morgan has designed ILITs for New York clients throughout all five boroughs and surrounding counties for over two decades.
What are Crummey powers and why are they essential for ILITs in New York?
For a gift to an irrevocable trust to qualify for the gift tax annual exclusion ($18,000 per donee in 2024), the gift must be a present interest — meaning the beneficiary must have an immediate, unrestricted right to use and enjoy the gift now. Trust gifts are generally future interests. The Crummey power (named after Crummey v. Commissioner) solves this problem by giving trust beneficiaries a temporary right — typically 30 to 60 days — to withdraw contributions made to the trust. Because the beneficiary has an immediate right to withdraw, the gift qualifies as a present interest eligible for the annual exclusion. As a practical matter, beneficiaries almost never exercise their Crummey withdrawal rights. But the withdrawal right must be real and must be communicated to the beneficiary in writing (the 'Crummey notice') each time a contribution is made. Failure to properly administer Crummey notices — a common error in self-managed ILITs — can disqualify the annual exclusion and result in unexpected gift tax liability. Morgan Legal Group drafts ILIT agreements with proper Crummey provisions and assists trustees with ongoing Crummey notice administration for New York clients across all five boroughs and surrounding counties.
What happens if I transfer an existing life insurance policy to an ILIT in New York?
Transferring an existing life insurance policy to an ILIT triggers the three-year rule under IRC §2035. This rule provides that if a grantor transfers a policy to an ILIT within three years of death, the death benefit is pulled back into the grantor's gross estate, negating the transfer's estate tax benefit. The three-year rule does not apply if the grantor made a cash gift to the ILIT and the trustee then applied for and purchased a new policy — because the grantor never owned the policy. For this reason, when planning allows, it is almost always preferable to have the ILIT established before any new policy is purchased. If a grantor has an existing policy with significant cash value or is uninsurable for new coverage, transferring the existing policy to an ILIT may still make sense, with the understanding that the insured should survive at least three years after the transfer for the estate tax benefit to be realized. Morgan Legal Group counsels New York clients on both new ILIT formation and existing policy transfers, providing full analysis of the three-year rule and any gift tax implications.
How can an ILIT provide estate tax liquidity for a New York estate?
One of the most powerful uses of an ILIT for New York estates is as an estate tax liquidity vehicle. Estate taxes in New York are due within nine months of the decedent's death — in cash. For estates whose wealth is concentrated in illiquid assets such as real estate or closely held business interests, meeting the estate tax deadline can be a serious problem. An ILIT can solve this liquidity problem elegantly. Because the ILIT receives the life insurance death benefit outside the estate (free of estate tax), the ILIT has a large pool of liquid cash available immediately upon the insured's death. The ILIT can purchase estate assets from the estate at fair market value — providing the estate with cash needed to pay taxes while transferring assets to the trust. Alternatively, the ILIT can make a loan to the estate, secured by estate assets. Both techniques provide the estate with immediate liquidity while maintaining the estate tax exclusion of the insurance proceeds. For New York business owners, real estate investors, and families with illiquid estates, ILIT planning is one of the most practical and cost-effective estate tax planning strategies available across all five boroughs and surrounding counties.

Related Estate Planning Topics

Additional resources: morganlegalny.com — Estate Planning Overview

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Russel Morgan, Esq. designs irrevocable life insurance trusts that protect New York families from unnecessary estate taxes. Serving all five boroughs and surrounding counties.

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(212) 561-4299888-LAW-1315contact@morganlegalgroup.com