What It Is
Premium Financing is a strategy where a third-party lender (typically a commercial bank) loans funds to pay life insurance premiums, rather than the insured using personal liquidity.
The client:
Pledges collateral
Pays loan interest
Retains capital for investment or business use
Leverages borrowed capital to secure a large death benefit
It is primarily used in estate planning and business succession liquidity strategies for high-net-worth individuals
Keep investment capital deployed
Avoid liquidating appreciated assets
Maintain portfolio compounding
Use borrowed funds at lower rates than expected portfolio returns
It’s a capital arbitrage strategy.
Estate taxes may require significant liquidity.
Premium financing allows:
Large death benefit coverage
Minimal initial out-of-pocket capital
Estate tax coverage without selling core holdings
Borrowed premium dollars create:
Tax-advantaged death benefit
Multiplied transfer value
Estate planning efficiency
If structured correctly, leverage enhances internal rate of return on net equity invested.
Client applies for life insurance (often GUL or IUL).
Bank lends annual premium.
Policy death benefit secures loan.
Client pays interest annually.
At death:
Loan is repaid.
Remaining death benefit passes to heirs or trust.
Because borrowing preserves investment capital.
If expected portfolio return exceeds loan interest, leverage may enhance overall estate outcome.
Yes, it carries risks including:
Interest rate increases
Collateral calls
Policy performance risk (especially with IUL)
Regulatory changes
It requires conservative modeling and active monitoring
Typically:
Liquid securities
Cash equivalents
Sometimes policy cash value
Commonly:
Guaranteed Universal Life (GUL) for predictability
Indexed Universal Life (IUL) for performance-based leverage
Occasionally Whole Life for conservative structures
GUL is most common in estate tax liquidity design.
Higher rates increase loan cost.
Clients may:
Post additional collateral
Repay loan partially
Restructure financing
Stress testing is critical.
Primarily yes, but also used for:
Business succession liquidity
Buy–sell agreements
Executive compensation strategies
Premium financing is most commonly used for:
Estate tax liquidity
ILIT-owned life insurance structures
Preserving illiquid estates
Avoiding forced sale of business or real estate
Generational wealth transfer
Funding large buy–sell obligations
Key person liquidity
Equalizing ownership interests
Covering leveraged businesses
Especially useful when coverage amounts are substantial ($10M+).
Typically appropriate when client:
Net worth: $10M–$25M+
Has strong liquidity and collateral
Has estate tax exposure
Is comfortable with leverage
Works with coordinated legal and tax team
Complex financial decisions benefit from experienced and thoughtful execution Schedule a brief date and time to discuss your goals and how we will help.
Global Investment Strategies provides educational planning concepts and does not provide legal or tax advice. All concepts should be reviewed with your qualified attorney, CPA, or tax professional
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