No, beneficiaries generally do not pay federal income tax on life insurance death benefits received as a lump sum, as it's considered an inheritance, but they may owe tax on any interest earned if payments are delayed or made in installments, or if the policy was transferred for value, while large estates might face estate taxes, and employer-paid policies over $50k can have tax implications for the insured.
Generally, life insurance proceeds you receive as a beneficiary due to the death of the insured person, aren't includable in gross income and you don't have to report them. However, any interest you receive is taxable and you should report it as interest received. See Topic 403 for more information about interest.
Your beneficiaries might also face inheritance taxes if life insurance goes through your estate. However, they would not owe inheritance tax if the policy pays them directly (as designated beneficiaries of a policy). Like estate taxes, most states do not have inheritance taxes.
Beneficiaries can avoid paying taxes if they receive the death benefit as a lump sum. However, some prefer to convert it into a payment stream, such as with a guaranteed life income annuity. In this instance, the beneficiary pays taxes on the interest accrued or the amount that exceeds the original death benefit.
In 2025, the first $13,990,000 of an estate is exempt from federal estate taxes, up from $13,610,000 in 2024. Estate taxes are based on the size of the estate. It's a progressive tax, just like the federal income tax system. This means that the larger the estate, the higher the tax rate it is subject to.
Yes, employer-provided group life insurance coverage over $50,000 becomes taxable as "imputed income" for the employee, meaning the IRS requires you to pay income and FICA taxes on the IRS-determined value of the coverage above $50k, even though you don't receive cash; this appears on your W-2, typically in Box 12 with code C, and the payout itself remains tax-free.
The "life insurance 7 year rule," or 7-Pay Test, is an IRS test for permanent life insurance (like Whole or Universal Life) to prevent overfunding; if you pay more than the maximum premium needed to fully fund the policy in seven years, it becomes a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC). MECs lose some tax benefits, making withdrawals and loans taxable as income (earnings first) and potentially subject to penalties, though they still provide a tax-free death benefit. The test resets if you make significant changes (like increasing the death benefit) to the policy, starting a new seven-year period.
Charity exemption
Like the spousal exemption, assets passing to charity on death are exempt from inheritance tax. As such, if an entire estate passes to charity, there will be no inheritance tax due.
Common beneficiary mistakes include failing to update designations after life changes (marriage, divorce, birth, death), not naming contingent (backup) beneficiaries, naming minors directly, conflicting designations with your will/trust, and not coordinating beneficiaries with your overall estate plan, all leading to potential probate, taxes, or unintended heirs receiving assets.
Fortunately, in California, there is neither an estate nor an inheritance tax, and the federal estate tax clicks in only if the value of the estate surpasses $12.92 million in 2023 (it rises each year according to inflation). The IRS likewise does not treat your inheritance as income.
A designated beneficiary does not have to pay tax on any amount they receive from a TFSA as long as the total amount is not more than the fair market value (FMV) of the property held in the TFSA on the date of death. However, any TFSA earnings made after the date of death and before the estate is settled are taxable.
Generally, beneficiaries do not pay income tax on money or property that they inherit, but there are exceptions for retirement accounts, life insurance proceeds, and savings bond interest. Money inherited from a 401(k), 403(b), or IRA is taxable if that money was tax deductible when it was contributed.
In general, any inheritance you receive does not need to be reported to the IRS. You typically don't need to report inheritance money to the IRS because inheritances aren't considered taxable income by the federal government. That said, earnings made off of the inheritance may need to be reported.
Your beneficiaries (the people who inherit your estate) do not normally pay tax on things they inherit. They may have related taxes to pay, for example if they get rental income from a house left to them in a will.
Many people in their 60s and 70s may no longer need life insurance. They may have already paid off the house, stopped working, sent the kids off to care for themselves or accumulated enough assets to offset the need for life insurance. But sometimes buying or maintaining a life insurance policy over age 60 makes sense.
Any other arrangement can fall into the transfer-for-value trap. If a policy is transferred for money or something of value, the death benefit is no longer fully income tax free. For example, the mutual obligation to purchase a co-owner's business interest at his death would be considered something of value.
Is life insurance part of an estate? The value of your life insurance policy will form part of your estate unless you've written your life insurance policy 'in trust'. If this is the case, the amount the policy pays out wouldn't be counted as part of your estate for Inheritance Tax purposes.
Yes, you can give your son $100,000 tax-free in 2025 by utilizing the annual gift tax exclusion and your lifetime exemption, but you'll need to report the gift to the IRS on Form 709 since it exceeds the $19,000 annual limit, though you won't pay tax unless you exceed your much larger $13.99 million lifetime gift/estate tax exemption. The gift is considered yours (the giver) for tax purposes, not your son's.