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Benefits Of A 1035 Tax-Free Exchange
What Is A 1035 Exchange
Section 1035 of the Internal revenue Code allows a tax-free exchange of cash values from a life insurance policy to another life insurance compaies life insurance
policy, as well as cash value of a life insurance policy to non qualified annuities with other carriers, or non qualified annuity to another carriers non qualified annuity product.
The benefit of a transfer is to allow an individual to exchange
contracts that can provide a greater rate of return or increase and leverage life insurance benefits without incurring a taxable event.
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TAX COURT ISSUES DECISION PERMITTING PARTIAL 1035 EXCHANGES
On
December 30, 1998, the Tax Court released the decision in Conway v. Commissioner, in which the Court held that a direct transfer of a portion of funds invested in an existing annuity contract to a new annuity contract qualified as a nontaxable exchange under
section 1035 of the Code. After the transfer, the taxpayer owned two separate annuity contracts, each with a different company. Below are relevant portions of this decision.
Under the facts set forth, the taxpayer owned an annuity contract with
Company A with a "total purchase price of $195,643." This contract was purchased in 1992. Two years later the taxpayer requested company A withdraw $119,000. From the contract and transfer the funds directly to Company B for the purchase of a new annuity contract
from Company B. Upon receipt of the funds from Company A as well as the taxpayer’s application, Company B opened an annuity contract for the taxpayer with an investment of $109,000 (the original $119,000 less the $10,000 surrender charge). The taxpayer
indicated on the Company B application that the withdrawal of the funds from the Company A annuity contract and transfer of the funds to Company B were to be treated as a section 1035 exchange.
The taxpayer did not report any taxable income relating
to the transfer of the funds from the Company A annuity to the Company B annuity. On audit, the Service determined that the taxpayer’s transfer of the funds from the Company A annuity to Company B did not qualify as a section 1035 exchange and that the
taxpayer had received taxable income from the transaction. In the decision, the Court summarized the arguments made by the Service and by the taxpayer. In brief, the Service had argued "that because the entire {Company A} annuity contract was not replaced
by the {Company B} annuity contract, petitioner’s withdrawal of $119,000 from the {Company A} annuity contract, does not qualify as a nontaxable exchange under section 1035.
The taxpayer’s argument provided "that because {Company A}
did not distribute any funds to her personally but rather transferred the funds directly to {Company B} and because she gave up a portion of her {Company A} annuity contract solely in exchange for the new {Company B} annuity contract, the transaction should
qualify as a nontaxable exchange of annuity contracts under section 1035."
The Court agreed with the taxpayer, basing its ruling on the wording of Section 1035, its regulations and legislative history. It found that:Neither section 1035 nor the
regulations condition no recognition treatment upon the exchange of an entire annuity contract. Respondent {Service} cites no authority to support respondent position that non-recognition treatment under section 1035 is limited to exchanges involving replacement
of entire annuity contracts. Neither the statute nor the regulations contain any such requirement, either expressly or by any necessary implication.
The Court determined that a broad definition of exchange, within the meaning of section 1035, was
appropriate and that as a result of the transaction the taxpayer was "in essentially the same position after the exchange as she was in before the exchange, and the same funds are still invested in annuity contracts (less the surrender fee), except that now
the petitioner owns two annuity contracts." Thus, the court concluded that the taxpayer’s "direct exchange of a portion of her {Company A} annuity contract for a new {Company B} annuity contract qualifies under section 1035 and that no gain to the petitioner
is to be recognized by reason of the exchange.
This case is significant as it explicitly permits a partial exchange to fall within the no recognition provisions of section 1035. This is an area of prior uncertainty. Historically, the Service has
indicated that partial exchanges are essentially surrenders for tax purposes and that the provisions of section 1035 (for exchanges) do not apply. We do not have any information as to how the IRS will respond to this decision. Courtesy of ACLI General Bulletin-Jan/99
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How Does It Work?
Let's use the following example:
Let's say you have a $100,000 whole life or universal life contract, with an annual premium of $1,000 that has a cash value of $50,000.
You are approached with a new insurance policy that will NOW provide you with $150,000 of life insurance coverage for the same annual premium of $1,000 that you were paying.
A 1035 tax free exchange is initiated and all cash values from the previous plan are transferred into the new contract.
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Let's use another example:
You have the same $100,000 whole life or universal life policy with an annual premium of $1,000 with cash values of $50,000.
You no longer require the insurance coverage but would like to increase your rate of return.
You can transfer the cash values, tax-free to an annuity.
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Another example:
Let's say you have an annuity that is earning 4.0% interest, BUT you discover another carrier that is offerring an annuity with a five (5) year guaranteed interest rate of 5.0%. You can exchange the old annuity tax-free to the new annuity carrier's product.
Sabrina DeRosa
31.01.2019 00:44
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03.08.2016 09:25
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