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Comparing Qualified Retirement Plans vs. Life Insurance Retirement Plans

💻 Friday Zoom Session – November 7

Topic: Comparing Qualified Retirement Plans vs. Life Insurance Retirement Plans

🎯 Session Objective

To compare the structure, risks, and long-term outcomes of qualified retirement plans (401(k), IRA) with life insurance retirement plans (LIRPs), and explore a hybrid strategy to maximize retirement income and minimize taxes.

🧩 Key Takeaways

  • Qualified Plans Have Critical Flaws

    • Taxes are deferred to an unknown future rate.

    • Exposed to sequence of returns risk, which can drastically reduce retirement income.

  • LIRPs Offer Superior Control

    • Properly structured Whole Life (WL) policies provide:

      • Tax-free growth and withdrawals

      • Guaranteed returns

      • Immediate liquidity — use as your own “private bank”

  • A Hybrid Strategy Maximizes Income

    • Draw from your qualified plan first to stay below the standard deduction (≈ 0% tax rate).

    • Then switch to tax-free LIRP withdrawals after depletion.

  • Liquidity Beats Rate of Return

    • Prioritize access to capital over debt elimination.

    • Liquidity enables you to pursue higher-return opportunities, like funding a LIRP.

⚠️ The Problem with Qualified Plans

1. Origin & Purpose

  • The 401(k) (created in 1978) shifted retirement risk from employers to employees.

  • Its inventor, Ted Benna, later expressed regret, citing high fees and the transfer of risk to workers.

2. Tax Deferral Is a Gamble

  • The government favors these plans because it collects taxes later, when rates are likely higher due to national debt.

  • This creates a “tax time bomb” — future tax costs are unpredictable.

3. Sequence of Returns Risk

  • Market volatility matters more than average returns.

  • Example: Two retirees with the same average return can end up with drastically different results:

    • Portfolio A: $211K

    • Portfolio B: $693K

💡 The Solution: A Life Insurance Retirement Plan (LIRP)

Vehicle: A properly structured Whole Life policy from a mutual company.

Why Whole Life (WL)?

  • Guaranteed growth and dividends

  • No market exposure or volatility

Why Not IUL (Indexed Universal Life)?

  • Market-linked returns = more risk

  • Example: Recent $8.5M lawsuit against an IUL provider over misleading performance claims

Tax Advantages:

  • After-tax contributions

  • Tax-free growth and withdrawals (like a Roth IRA — but no contribution limits)

Liquidity & Control:

  • Immediate Access: Borrow against up to 95% of your cash value.

  • “Money in Two Places” Concept:

    • Continue earning dividends on borrowed funds.

    • Use borrowed capital for other purposes (e.g., debt payoff, investments).

⚖️ The Hybrid Retirement Strategy

Goal:

Maximize spendable income and minimize taxes using both qualified plans and LIRPs.

How It Works:

  1. Draw from Qualified Plan First

    • Keep withdrawals below the standard deduction → effective 0% tax rate.

  2. Switch to LIRP Withdrawals

    • Once the qualified account is depleted, move to tax-free income from your LIRP.

Example Outcomes:

  • $1M in a Qualified Plan → ~$28K/year (after 20% tax)

  • $1M in a LIRP → $40K–$70K/year, tax-free

🏠 Q&A: HELOCs & Home Equity

Q: Should I pay off my HELOC early?

A: Not necessarily.

  • Paying off debt stops interest but doesn’t grow wealth.

  • Prioritize liquidity — funding a LIRP can grow your capital and keep it accessible.

Alternative Strategy:

  • At age 62, a reverse mortgage can provide tax-free access to home equity — like a no-payment, tax-free HELOC.

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