Personal Finance Essentials
Insurance for Business Owners
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- Insurance for Business Owners
- Key Principles About Insurance
One Bad Day Can Destroy a Business You Spent a Lifetime Building
These Policies Exist to Prevent That
Business owners and self-employed individuals face financial risks that employees don’t. When something goes wrong in a business – a critical person is lost, operations are disrupted or a partner dies – the consequences can be severe and sudden. The right insurance policies don’t just protect against these events; they give the business the financial resources to survive them. There are several types of coverage that every business owner should consider.
Key Person Insurance
Key person insurance – sometimes called key man coverage – addresses exactly this risk. If you lose an employee who is critical to the daily operations of your company, you could lose substantial revenue. Identify the people whose absence would put the company at risk and make sure appropriate coverage is in place.
Business Continuity Insurance
This type of coverage is particularly important for professionals in private practice – physicians, dentists, attorneys and similar solo or small-group practitioners. Consider what happens when a dentist breaks a finger and cannot work. The staff cannot replace the dentist; there is no revenue from patients. The rent still comes due. Employees, facing uncertainty, may start looking for other jobs. By the time the dentist recovers and returns to practice, there might not be a practice left to return to.
BOE coverage prevents that outcome. It keeps income flowing so the practice can hire a temporary replacement, retain staff and meet its financial obligations – preserving the business through a disruption that would otherwise be fatal to it. The same principle applies to any small business whose ability to generate revenue depends heavily on the presence and participation of its owner.
Business continuity planning extends beyond insurance as well. Does your company have a plan in place for what happens if no one can enter the office due to fire or another emergency? What if the company’s inventory is destroyed? What if key executives are injured or otherwise unavailable when a crisis strikes? Insurance provides the financial resources; a written continuity plan provides the operational response. Both are necessary.
Cross-Sell Insurance
Cross-sell insurance is designed to prevent this outcome. It is, at its core, a use of life insurance – not a distinct product, but one of the most important applications of life insurance in a business context. Each partner takes out a life insurance policy on the other. When one partner dies, the policy pays out to the surviving partners, providing them with the capital to buy out the deceased’s ownership stake from the estate or surviving family.
This arrangement accomplishes two things simultaneously. It creates immediate liquidity for the deceased partner’s family, giving them cash in exchange for a business interest they may have no practical use for. And it gives the surviving owners control over the future of their business, free from the uncertainty and potential conflict of having an uninvolved heir as an involuntary co-owner. For any multi-owner business, this is not an optional consideration – it is a fundamental part of sound business planning.
A Critical Warning for Business Owners: The Disability Insurance Tax Trap
If you are a business owner, this is one of the most important things you will read about insurance. It concerns disability income coverage and a seemingly attractive tax strategy that will cost you dearly if you fall for it.
As a business owner, you can deduct the cost of your disability income insurance policy as a normal business expense. Doing so gives you a tax deduction today. Don’t do it.
Here’s why. When an insurance company pays you a disability claim, that money is tax-free. But there is an important exception: if you receive benefits from a policy whose premiums were treated as a business expense, those benefits are considered taxable income. The tax deduction you took on your premiums eliminates the tax-free status of your benefits.
In other words, you can have the small tax deduction now on your premiums, or the much larger tax-free benefit later if you become disabled. You cannot have both. Given that disability benefits can replace years of income, the choice is clear: pay for your disability income policy out of your own pocket, not out of your business account. By forgoing the small deduction today, any disability income payments you receive in the future will be entirely tax-free.
