Key person insurance can help you maintain business continuity.
Your business, like many others, may rely on someone for the majority of its earnings. This someone is often referred to as a “key person” because their knowledge, skillset or contribution is critical to the company’s success.
It’s important to protect your company against the sudden loss of this individual. Key person insurance can help you maintain continuity and cover any losses that may occur from a decreased ability to conduct business while you identify and train a successor. It can also serve the secondary purpose of benefitting the insured in retirement.
Key person insurance isn’t a type of insurance policy in and of itself, but it’s the name given to life insurance that pays upon the death of a specified individual within the company to help a business survive financially.
The company usually chooses between two types of policies.
A key person can be a founder, owner, partner or any employee whose death may result in catastrophic financial losses to the business. A business identifies a key person using several factors such as:
With key person insurance, the business is owner and beneficiary of the life insurance policy, both paying the premium and receiving the death benefit. The proceeds from key person insurance can be used in several ways:
The business can also access the potential cash value of the policy to use as a retirement benefit for the key person.
Key person coverage typically ranges from five to 10 times the individual’s annual pay. Also consider a person’s replacement costs, their value to the business and the extent of company losses you’re willing to insure.
You can also use this formula:
Talk to your financial advisor about the potential benefits and options of key person insurance for safeguarding your business’s financial stability.