Does Your Employer Provide Life Insurance? Here Are The Tax Consequences
Employer-provided life insurance is a coveted fringe benefit. However, if group term life insurance is part of your benefit package, and the coverage is higher than $50,000, there may be undesirable income tax implications.
Tax on income you donât receive
The first $50,000 of group term life insurance coverage that your employer provides is excluded from taxable income and doesnât add anything to your income tax bill. But the employer-paid cost of group term coverage in excess of $50,000 is taxable income to you. Itâs included in the taxable wages reported on your Form W-2 â even though you never actually receive it. In other words, itâs âphantom income.â
Whatâs worse, the cost of group term insurance must be determined under a table prepared by the IRS even if the employerâs actual cost is less than the cost figured under the table. With these determinations, the amount of taxable phantom income attributed to an older employee is often higher than the premium the employee would pay for comparable coverage under an individual term policy. This tax trap gets worse as an employee gets older and as the amount of his or her compensation increases.
Your W-2 has answers
What should you do if you think the tax cost of employer-provided group term life insurance is higher than youâd like? First, you should establish if this is actually the case. If a specific dollar amount appears in Box 12 of your Form W-2 (with code âCâ), that dollar amount represents your employerâs cost of providing you with group term life insurance coverage in excess of $50,000, less any amount you paid for the coverage. Youâre responsible for federal, state and local taxes on the amount that appears in Box 12 and for the associated Social Security and Medicare taxes as well.
But keep in mind that the amount in Box 12 is already included as part of your total âWages, tips and other compensationâ in Box 1 of the W-2, and itâs the Box 1 amount thatâs reported on your tax return
Possible options
If you decide that the tax cost is too high for the benefit youâre getting in return, find out whether your employer has a âcarve-outâ plan (a plan that carves out selected employees from group term coverage) or, if not, whether it would be willing to create one. There are different types of carve-out plans that employers can offer to their employees.
For example, the employer can continue to provide $50,000 of group term insurance (since thereâs no tax cost for the first $50,000 of coverage). Then, the employer can either provide the employee with an individual policy for the balance of the coverage, or give the employee the amount the employer would have spent for the excess coverage as a cash bonus that the employee can use to pay the premiums on an individual policy.
Contact us if you have questions about group term coverage or whether itâs adding to your tax bill.
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