Your residence: other countries
Your interests: Capital preservation and capital gains, Tax optimization, Estate planning, Relocation of primary residence

 

Facets of life and annuity insurance coverage, asset protection

In nearly all countries, capital-accruing life and annuity policies are widely established instruments for building retirement capital and preserving assets. Moreover, privately placed insurance contracts offer wealthy families the opportunity to influence capital preservation and the long-term development of the family’s assets by specifying and/or amending the contract’s underlying investment strategy.

Suitably formulated contractual provisions with various insurance companies in different jurisdictions can also offer a high level of protection against third-party access in seizure and bankruptcy proceedings (for instance with respect to entrepreneurial liability risks or directors’ and officers’ liability claims).

Attractive fiscal aspects of insurance contracts

Life and annuity insurance contracts are treated differently than assets in custody or real estate, for example. Usually, insurance contracts without period capital payouts are not subject to periodic income tax. Whether or not and how much tax is due depends on the nature and occasion of future capital withdrawals under such contracts. In many cases, contract design can result in interesting income, bestowal or inheritance tax effects even for the assets of very wealthy families.

Together with the client’s tax and legal advisors in many countries, swisspartners will develop suitable concepts.

Wealth transfer outside the estate

Benefit entitlements from insurance contracts are not in the estate of the testator if the contracts are suitably designed. Combined with adequate long-term planning, this approach also allows the implementation of successorship scenarios provided for outside the legal succession sequence that are largely exempt from legitime, or forced share, legislation. Contrary to a bank, for instance, an insurance company can pay out benefits even if no certificate of inheritance is submitted. Thus, the immediate legal competence of the successor after the decease of the asset owner is assured.

Under a successorship, benefits from insurance contracts are sometimes subject to inheritance tax, but the representatives of the next generation are entitled to receive them free of all income tax in many instances. For this reason, insurance contracts – occasionally in conjunction with trust or foundation structures – are ideal for wealth preservation across generations.

Tax privileges on relocation or for family members abroad

Privately placed insurance contracts are designed under consideration of the contract legislation and fiscal constraints of those tax jurisdictions in which the respective family members are domiciled. Properly designed contracts of this kind are fiscally privileged in several countries; this can be crucial for individuals who frequently live in different countries for professional reasons. A key aspect in the design of privately placed insurance contracts lies in reducing the overall fiscal burden of the tied-up assets in the event of planned relocations of the asset owner or if the beneficiaries are domiciled in various jurisdictions.

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