Internal Revenue Code section 79
Section 79 of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code sets out the U.S. Federal income tax law concerning term life insurance plans provided by employers. Tax benefits are available for both employers and participating employees, under certain conditions.
Section 79 plans
Section 79 details the tax consequences and requirements for employers wishing to install a group-term life insurance plan. Permanent life insurance may also be offered as an added benefit in a Section 79 plan. Section 79 plans are non-qualified as defined by the Internal Revenue Code, but still offer a tax deduction for sponsoring employers.An employee must include in gross income for Federal income tax purposes an amount equal to the cost of group-term life insurance coverage on the employee's life to the extent that the cost of the coverage exceeds the sum of $50,000 plus the amount paid by the employee to purchase the coverage. Contributions to a Section 79 plan are tax-deductible, though for owner, and 2% or more shareholders, contributions are deductible only if paid by, and from, a C Corporation.
A Section 79 benefit program may allow the following benefits.
- The ability to purchase permanent life insurance with corporate dollars
- Deduct all of the cost to the C corporation as a business expense
- Allow the transfer of corporate dollars to the business owner on a tax-favored basis
- Grow the money in the plan in a tax-deferred setting
- Access to money in the plan can be achieved through policy loans on a tax-deferred basis
- Death benefits can pass to heirs on an income tax-free basis.
- There are no regulatory limits on funding for the key participants
- May provide asset protection by removing plan assets from the reach of company creditors
- Provides for minimal rank and file employee cost
- Insurance cash values may provide tax-free income as long as the policy is kept in force and withdrawals do not exceed the cost basis
- Group life insurance benefits
- Deductible insurance to fund estate planning needs of the business owner
- Deductible insurance to provide personal life insurance needs for the owner
- Deductible insurance to fund a buy-sell agreement or key man policy
- Future business buyout on a tax-advantaged basis
Determining the death benefit
Calculating the tax liability
In a non-discriminatory Section 79 plan, the first $50,000 of coverage is provided free to all employees. Any group coverage over this amount is deemed a benefit for which the employee must pay. The pure insurance portion is factored using the Internal Revenue Service published Table I rates . If using permanent insurance the portion calculated as the 'permanent benefit' takes into account premium paid, accumulated and cash surrender value, and other policy factors.Requirements
There are generally four main conditions which must be met when installing a Section 79 plan:- The plan must provide a death benefit excludable from income under Code section 101
- Must be provided to a group of employees
- Must be provided under a policy carried directly or indirectly by the employer
- Maximum death benefits for each employee based on a multiple of compensation
Non-discriminatory
- Cover at least 70% of employees
- No more than 15% of the participants are key employees
- Benefits based on reasonable classifications
Discriminatory
Yet another set of requirements comes into play if the company has less than 10 employees.
Under 10 employees
- Employees with less than six months of full-time employment may be excluded
- Benefits must be based on a uniform percentage of compensation or coverage brackets, such that no bracket is more than 2.5 times the next lowest bracket and the lowest bracket is at least 10% of the highest bracket
With 10 or more employees
Excluded employees
- Employees with less than 36 months of full-time employment may be excluded
- Employees under the age of 18 or over the age of 64
- Part-time or seasonal employees
- Employees covered under a union contract, provided the group term life insurance benefits were the subject of good faith bargaining
- Anyone not medically approved
- Anyone choosing to opt out
Coverage for spouses and dependents
Some cases may allow more.