When ultra-high-net-worth individuals look for ways to improve after-tax investment returns, most focus on income deferral, asset allocation, charitable planning, and other strategies like non-grantor trusts. One of the most overlooked, but highly effective, tax strategies is Private Placement Life Insurance (PPLI). PPLI isn’t your average life insurance policy. It’s a flexible, tax-efficient planning strategy that wraps an investment portfolio inside a life insurance structure.

What Is Private Placement Life Insurance?

The concept behind PPLI is simple: by investing inside a life insurance policy, you take advantage of the favorable tax treatment granted to life insurance under the Internal Revenue Code. If structured correctly, PPLI allows:

  • Income and gains to be realized and compound tax-free
  • Cash value to be accessed tax-free through loans and withdrawals
  • A death benefit to pass income-tax-free to heirs

In other words, private placement life insurance helps convert otherwise taxable income into tax-free wealth. It’s especially beneficial for individuals with allocations to tax-inefficient investments like private credit, private equity, and hedge funds.

How PPLI Is Structured

While PPLI is built on a Variable Universal Life (VUL) chassis, its structure is fundamentally different. PPLI offers a level of customization that doesn’t exist in commercial VUL policies, particularly around cost, funding, and investment options.

Lower Costs

With commercial VUL, the death benefit is typically tied to the total premiums paid. Most policyholders want to maximize coverage for the dollars they commit. PPLI takes the opposite approach. The goal is not to maximize death benefit, it’s to minimize insurance costs so that more capital remains in the policy to grow tax-free. Because PPLI is customizable, the death benefit can be set just above the policy’s cash value, low enough to reduce insurance drag, but high enough to maintain life insurance treatment under the tax code.

Quicker Funding

While commercial VUL allows for various premium schedules (e.g., single-pay, 7-pay, or lifetime funding), policies are generally structured to spread payments over at least seven years to avoid classification as a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC), which would otherwise limit the policy’s tax-free access features. Because PPLI allows for precise control over the relationship between death benefit and cash value, policies can often be fully funded in just three years without triggering MEC classification. That means the policy’s cash value can begin accumulating and compounding much sooner.

Broader Investment Options

Once funded, the policy’s cash value is invested in a Separately Managed Account (SMA) held at an institutional custodian. There are rules around diversification and investor control, so the policyholder cannot directly manage the policy’s assets to preserve PPLI status. Instead, Cerity Partners handles portfolio construction, trading, and management.

More importantly, unlike commercial VUL policies that offer only pre-selected mutual fund subaccounts, private placement life insurance allows for a broader range of investments, including:

  • Private credit
  • Private equity
  • Hedge funds
  • Real estate
  • Publicly traded securities

This flexibility enables the portfolio inside the policy to mirror the client’s broader investment strategy without being constrained by the limitations of commercial VUL that sacrifice performance.

How PPLI Is Used

There are two core uses for PPLI: 1) accessing tax-free liquidity during life and 2) creating a tax-efficient legacy outside of the estate.

First, PPLI can serve as a “family bank.” Once the policy is funded, the cash value can be accessed income-tax-free through policy loans. There is no requirement to repay those loans during life. Instead, any outstanding balance is simply backed out of the death benefit when the insured passes. This creates a reliable, tax-free source of liquidity later in life, often used as a complement (or even substitute) for traditional retirement savings vehicles.

Unlike qualified retirement accounts, there are no contribution limits, required distributions, or penalties for early access. For those who have already maxed out retirement plans or are facing income limitations on other tax-advantaged savings, this can be an attractive way to build additional tax-free capital that’s accessible on their own terms. Indeed, some describe PPLI as “a Roth IRA on steroids.”

Second, PPLI can be structured for long-term legacy and estate tax planning. When the policy is held by a carefully crafted irrevocable trust, it can appreciate and remain outside of the taxable estate. That means families can build and preserve significant wealth across generations without triggering estate or income tax at death, making it a great source of liquidity for estate tax liability, wealth replacement, and generational wealth transfer.

Who PPLI Is For

When evaluating whether PPLI is the right fit for a client, Cerity Partners looks at the following criteria:

  • The client has significant exposure to ordinary income or short-term gains
  • Investment capital is being allocated to tax-inefficient assets
  • There is a desire for long-term, multigenerational planning
  • Liquidity will be needed for estate tax or other obligations
  • The client can commit to funding a policy with at least $2M in premiums
  • The client is a Qualified Purchaser and Accredited Investor

PPLI is not a retail insurance product. Rather, it is a custom-built planning strategy designed for sophisticated and affluent individuals. When structured correctly and implemented as part of a broader estate and investment plan, it can meaningfully enhance after-tax returns, simplify wealth transfer, and provide long-term financial flexibility.

Read more about the Cerity Partners Family Office and our comprehensive services for families of means. Visit our Insurance Planning and Risk Management to learn more about our specialized capabilities and higher standard of care.  

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