Insurancy

Is Life Insurance a Business Expense?

While business owners can technically deduct life insurance premiums as an expense, it is a bad idea.

Is Life Insurance a Business Expense?
Brian Greenberg

Written by Brian Greenberg

CEO / Founder & Licensed Insurance Agent

Grant Desselle

Reviewed by Grant Desselle

Licensed Insurance Agent

Last updated: February 2023 | 3 min read

Life insurance as a business expense at a glance

  • Businesses can deduct life insurance premiums only in very specific situations and with strict criteria.
  • S Corporations and LLCs may deduct premiums for group policies when the business is not beneficiary.
  • Only the first $50,000 of premiums paid are deductible, amounts above that are not deductible.
  • C Corporations cannot deduct premiums when shareholders have company policies and the company is beneficiary.
  • Key person premiums are not deductible when the business is beneficiary, with one taxable-income exception.
  • Incorrectly deducting premiums can make policy benefits taxable, which can reduce employees' benefits.

Unlike the strict rules for individuals, it’s true that businesses have a bit more leniency with tax-deductible life insurance premiums. But only in very specific cases are they deductible as a business expense. In all other cases, deducting those premiums can lead to costly consequences.

When Can Businesses Deduct Life Insurance Premiums as a Business Expense?

Businesses must meet a very specific set of qualifications for these premiums to be a deductible business expense. And even those rules have their own caveats.

These are the criteria that businesses must meet:

  • They must be classified as either an S Corporation or an LLC.
  • The insureds must be employees or corporate officers under a group policy.
  • The company CAN NOT be named as the beneficiary of the group life insurance policy.
  • Only the first $50,000 of premiums paid are deductible. Anything after that is no longer deductible.

For C Corporations, premiums aren’t a deductible expense if shareholders have policies through the company and the company is the beneficiary. In this situation, the life insurance benefit is also a taxable fringe benefit.

Self-employed people and freelancers are not eligible to deduct their life insurance premiums as a business expense either. They fall under the same considerations as individual policies.



Are Key Person Life Insurance Premiums a Deductible as a Business Expense?

Key-person life insurance exists to help businesses protect themselves in the event that an integral member dies. This can be in place for a founder or someone with a specific set of skills that would hurt your business if they weren’t there.

In cases where the business is the beneficiary, the premiums from a key person policy are not tax-deductible as a business expense.

Now, there is an exception to this rule. If the premiums are part of the employee’s taxable income, then the premiums from a key person policy are deductible as a business expense. In this case, the employee is the beneficiary, which makes it eligible for deduction.

Learn more: Is life insurance tax-deductible?


Are Buy-Sell Agreements a Deductible as a Business Expense?

A buy-sell agreement operates along similar lines as key person insurance. In this case, it allows co-owners of a business to protect themselves in the event that one owner leaves or dies.

These agreements can be funded with life insurance policies, either purchased individually by each co-owner or by the company itself. This way if a co-owner dies then the others will receive the benefits from that policy.

Since the business is the beneficiary of a buy-sell agreement, then those premiums are not a tax-deductible business expense. Unlike a key person policy, buy-sell agreements funded through life insurance do not carry any exceptions for deductions.

Learn more about funding a buy-sell agreement with life insurance


What Are the Consequences of Deducting Life Insurance Premiums as a Business Expense?

Even if you know that life insurance premiums usually aren’t deductible, you may think that writing them off as a business expense isn’t a big deal. In fact, it’s a huge deal and it stands to hurt your employees the most.

Deducting your life insurance premiums as a business expense makes the benefits on the policy become taxable. If you do this with a large group policy, beyond the $50,000 of coverage available for S Corps and LLCs, this means that all of your employees will get saddled with a tax on their benefits. This means a large chunk of your employees’ otherwise non-taxable benefit is unavailable to them.

For this reason, it is of the highest importance that you understand when you should and shouldn’t deduct premiums. Or your employees and their beneficiaries will get a rude awakening when they try and collect their benefits.

Have Questions?

If you find yourself with further eligibility questions, it’s best to reach out to a professional. Navigating complicated tax codes that change from year to year can be confusing and a financial professional can help you find the right way forward.

Thankfully, Insurancy is here to help!
Toll-Free: (855) 458-1985
E-mail: Info@insurancy.com
Contact us page
Let and independent life insurance agent shop for you

Frequently asked questions

When can a business deduct life insurance premiums as a business expense?+

Life insurance premiums can be deductible only when specific requirements are met. The business must be an S Corporation or LLC, insureds must be employees or corporate officers under a group policy, the company cannot be the beneficiary, and only the first $50,000 of premiums paid are deductible.

How much group life insurance premium can an S Corp or LLC deduct?+

An S Corporation or LLC can deduct only the first $50,000 of premiums paid on a qualifying group life insurance policy. Any premium amount beyond that threshold is no longer deductible as a business expense, even if other eligibility requirements are met.

Can a C Corporation deduct life insurance premiums paid for shareholders?+

For C Corporations, premiums are not a deductible expense when shareholders have policies through the company and the company is the beneficiary. In that same situation, the life insurance benefit is treated as a taxable fringe benefit.

Can self-employed people or freelancers deduct life insurance premiums as a business expense?+

Self-employed people and freelancers are not eligible to deduct life insurance premiums as a business expense. Their policies fall under the same considerations as individual life insurance policies, which do not qualify for these business deductions.

Are key person life insurance premiums tax-deductible for a business?+

Key person life insurance premiums are not tax-deductible as a business expense when the business is the beneficiary. An exception applies if the premiums are part of the employee's taxable income, in which case the premiums are deductible and the employee is the beneficiary.

Are buy-sell agreement life insurance premiums deductible as a business expense?+

Buy-sell agreements funded with life insurance are not a tax-deductible business expense when the business is the beneficiary. Unlike key person policies, there are no exceptions that allow deductions for buy-sell agreement premiums funded through life insurance.

What happens if a business incorrectly deducts life insurance premiums?+

Deducting life insurance premiums as a business expense can make the benefits on the policy become taxable. If this is done with a large group policy beyond the $50,000 of coverage available for S Corps and LLCs, employees can be saddled with taxes that reduce otherwise non-taxable benefits.

About the authors

Brian Greenberg

Written by

Brian GreenbergCEO / Founder & Licensed Insurance Agent

Brian is the founder and CEO of Insurancy and carries Life, Health, and Property & Casualty licenses in all 50 U.S. states. Since 2013, Brian has been a member of Million Dollar Round Table, a designation for the top 1% of financial advisors worldwide. Brian has been featured in Yahoo! Finance, Money.com, Entrepreneur.com, Life Happens, Forbes, MSN, and Good Financial Cents. Brian’s goal is to show customers the best products, the quickest answers to their questions, and provide expert advice.

Grant Desselle

Reviewed by

Grant DesselleLicensed Insurance Agent

Grant's past experience includes work as a licensed sales agent for Hagerty Insurance. He has reviewed thousands of existing auto policies across the nation and issued hundreds of new ones on everything ranging from classic cars undergoing restoration to modern exotics and motorcycles.

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