Why Whole of Life in trust might be the most misunderstood legacy savings plan available
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Why Whole of Life in trust might be the most misunderstood legacy savings plan available
Most landlords do not think of insurance as a savings strategy; they see it as a cost. A necessary one perhaps, but still a cost. That instinct is understandable, because most forms of insurance are designed to protect against events that may never happen – e.g. buildings insurance, liability cover, rent guarantee, etc. – you pay the premium and hope you never need to claim.
Whole of Life insurance written in trust sits in a very different category. It is not protecting against a possibility; it is planning for a certainty.
The difference most people overlook
Every landlord who has built a meaningful portfolio faces the same eventual outcome. At some point, their estate will be assessed for inheritance tax. This is not a remote risk; it is a known future event. That distinction matters because it changes how the numbers should be viewed.
A typical scenario might look like this. A couple in their fifties are quoted around £770 per month for £1 million of cover. The immediate reaction is to view that as an outgoing of £770 leaving the household each month, but let’s look at it another way. That £770 is not disappearing; it is being converted into a guaranteed future payout that will be triggered at exactly the moment the liability arises. In that sense, it behaves far more like a ring-fenced legacy fund than a traditional insurance policy.
A savings plan with a defined purpose
Most savings plans are open-ended, in that you build capital over time and then decide later how it will be used – for example: retirement income, reinvestment, gifting, or simply holding cash for optionality.
Whole of Life in trust works in reverse.
The purpose is defined first, e.g. cover the inheritance tax liability.
The funding mechanism is then structured to deliver that outcome with certainty.
For property investors, this clarity can be particularly valuable. Their wealth is often tied up in appreciating assets that generate income but do not easily convert to cash at short notice. A policy written in trust creates liquidity precisely where the portfolio cannot.
Why it often outperforms “do nothing and invest”
A common objection is that the premiums could instead be invested elsewhere. On the surface, that seems reasonable. £770 per month invested over time could accumulate into a substantial sum.
However, the problem is not the potential return, it is the timing and certainty, because inheritance tax does not wait for markets to be favourable. It does not pause while assets are sold. It does not adjust based on whether a portfolio is temporarily illiquid. Instead, it becomes payable when the estate is assessed, and an investment portfolio may or may not be worth the right amount at the right time, whereas a Whole of Life policy is designed specifically to be. That difference removes a layer of uncertainty that many families only recognise when it is too late.
The trust structure changes everything
The “in trust” element is often treated as a technical detail, but in reality, it is fundamental.
When structured correctly, the policy proceeds do not form part of the estate. Instead, they are paid directly to trustees, who can then use the funds to settle the inheritance tax liability. This avoids two critical problems. First, it prevents the payout from increasing the taxable estate. Second, it ensures that funds are available immediately, rather than being locked inside the probate process.
For families with property portfolios, this can be the difference between orderly succession and forced decision-making under pressure.
Certainty versus flexibility
There is a broader philosophical point here. Many financial strategies prioritise flexibility. Keep options open, retain access to capital, adapt as circumstances change.
That approach has merit during the accumulation phase, but legacy planning is different. At that stage, certainty often becomes more valuable than flexibility.
Whole of Life in trust is, in effect, a decision to exchange a known monthly cost for a known future outcome. For some, that trade-off will feel restrictive. For others, it provides a level of clarity and control that no other structure quite replicates.
Why timing matters more than the product
As our previous article demonstrated, the availability and pricing of cover can change quickly. Health events, even relatively minor ones, can alter the economics permanently.
The irony is that the best time to consider this type of planning is often the moment when it feels least urgent. That is also the moment when it is most efficient.
A different way to think about legacy
Seen through the right lens, Whole of Life in trust is not simply about covering a tax bill. It is about protecting the integrity of a lifetime’s work. It allows a property portfolio to pass intact, without the need for distressed sales, emergency borrowing, or compromises that undermine long-term plans.
For many landlords, that is the real objective. Not just to build wealth, but to pass it on in a controlled and deliberate way.
In that context, the question is not whether the premiums represent good value in isolation, the question is whether the outcome they secure is worth the cost.
Final thoughts
Most savings plans are judged on growth, Whole of Life insurance in trust should be judged on certainty, and for families whose wealth is tied up in property, certainty at the right moment can be the most valuable asset of all.
In terms of viability, £770 per month for £1 million of cover works out at roughly £9,200 per year. Even over 30 years, that is in the region of £276,000 in total premiums. They would need to live a very long time before the premiums paid exceed the £1,000,000 payout. More importantly, the outcome is not linear. They could pay a single premium and die the following month, in which case the full £1 million is paid. Also, if they were to delay they could suffer a change in health, and find the same cover is no longer available on comparable terms.
Get A Quote
Our research into Whole of Life insurance was kindly assisted by Alice Ward-Smith, a whole of market, FCA regulated, Independent Financial Adviser.
To arrange a free consultation with Alice or her team, please complete and submit the form below.
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