If your business offers health insurance benefits to employees,
there’s a good chance you’ve seen a climb in premium costs in recent years —
perhaps a dramatic one. To meet the challenge of rising costs, some employers
are opting for a creative alternative to traditional health insurance known as
“captive insurance.” A captive insurance company generally is wholly owned and
controlled by the employer. So it’s essentially like forming your own insurance
company. And it provides tax advantages, too.
Benefits abound
Potential benefits of forming a captive insurance company
include:
- Stabilized or lower premiums,
- More control over claims,
- Lower administrative costs, and
- Access to certain types of coverage that are
unavailable or too expensive on the commercial health insurance market.
You can customize your coverage package and charge premiums that
more accurately reflect your business’s true loss exposure.
Another big benefit is that you can participate in the captive’s
underwriting profits and investment income. When you pay commercial health
insurance premiums, a big chunk of your payment goes toward the insurer’s
underwriting profit. But when you form a captive, you retain this profit
through the captive.
Also, your business can enjoy investment and cash flow benefits
by investing premiums yourself instead of paying them to a commercial insurer.
Tax impact
A captive insurance company may also save you tax dollars. For
example, premiums paid to a captive are tax-deductible and the captive can
deduct most of its loss reserves. To qualify for federal income tax purposes, a
captive must meet several criteria. These include properly priced premiums
based on actuarial and underwriting considerations and a sufficient level of
risk distribution as determined by the IRS.
Recent U.S. Tax Court rulings have determined that risk
distribution exists if there’s a large enough pool of unrelated risks — or, in
other words, if risk is spread over a sufficient number of employees. This is
true regardless of how many entities are involved.
Additional tax benefits may be available if your captive
qualifies as a “microcaptive” (a captive with $2.2 million or less in premiums
that meets certain additional tests): You may elect to exclude premiums from
income and pay taxes only on net investment income. Be aware, however, that
you’ll lose certain deductions with this election.
Also keep in mind that there are some potential drawbacks to
forming a captive insurance company. Contact us to learn more about the tax treatment
and other pros and cons of captive insurance. We can help you determine whether
this alternative may be right for your business.
© 2017
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