What Most Families Miss About Whole Life Insurance Tax Strategies
Most people miss the hidden power of whole life insurance tax strategies—and in doing so, they overpay in taxes and underfund their legacy. In today’s podcast episode, Bruce Wehner dives deep into how the tax code is designed to reward strategic behavior—and how you can align your actions to reduce your tax burden and redirect that capital into wealth-building vehicles like whole life insurance.
https://www.youtube.com/live/Z4BEoTli--k
In this blog, I’m going to walk you through the real, practical ways to lower your taxes, use the savings wisely, and fund your policy in a way that supports your family’s future. Whether you're a W-2 employee, small business owner, or investor, this episode breaks down how to build wealth with intention.
What Most Families Miss About Whole Life Insurance Tax StrategiesWhole Life Insurance Tax Strategies Start with Tax Code IncentivesW-2 vs. Business Owner: Two Different Tax SystemsEmploying Your Kids: A Hidden GemS-Corp Strategy: Split Income, Save TaxesReal Estate Depreciation & Cost SegregationQualified Plan Repositioning: Turn Tax-Deferred Dollars into Tax-Free WealthRoth Conversions: A Strategic ShiftFunding Policies Through Parents and ChildrenThe Opportunity in Plain SightRepositioning Money Isn’t Just Smart—It’s Biblical StewardshipWant to Go Deeper into Whole Life Insurance Tax Strategies?Book A Strategy Call
Whole Life Insurance Tax Strategies Start with Tax Code Incentives
Congress doesn’t just collect taxes—they guide behavior through tax incentives. The tax code is filled with legal ways to reduce what you owe, especially if you understand its design. The goal is not to avoid taxes but to steward your resources wisely.
Tom Wheelwright, CPA for Robert Kiyosaki, frames it this way: the tax code is a roadmap filled with incentives. It’s designed to encourage investments in real estate, energy, and business—moves that ultimately strengthen the economy.
When you understand these incentives, you begin to ask a better question: “How can I reposition my taxable income into long-term wealth?”
That’s where properly structured whole life insurance comes in.
W-2 vs. Business Owner: Two Different Tax Systems
There are two tax codes in America: one for employees, and one for business owners. If you're a W-2 earner, your options are limited. But if you own a business — even a small one — the deductions available to you multiply.
Start with something simple. You don’t need an LLC to begin. A sole proprietorship qualifies you for deductions like:
Home office expenses
Business mileage
Cell phone usage
Meals and entertainment
All of those deductions lower your taxable income and free up cash flow that can be redirected to fund a properly designed whole life policy.
Employing Your Kids: A Hidden Gem
One of the most overlooked strategies is hiring your children in your business. If they earn a legitimate wage (think: cleaning the office, organizing paperwork, or appearing in marketing photos), you can pay them up to $12,000/year tax-free.
For you, it’s a deductible business expense.For them, it’s tax-free income under the standard deduction.
That $12,000 could go directly into a whole life insurance policy for your child. You've just shifted taxable income into a tax-free legacy asset.
S-Corp Strategy: Split Income, Save Taxes
Another powerful tax strategy is the S-Corporation. If you operate your business as an S-Corp, you can split your income into a salary (subject to payroll taxes) and a distribution (not subject to self-employment tax).
Example:
Salary: $100,000 (pays payroll taxes)
Distribution: $200,000 (saves 15.3% self-employment tax)
That tax savings could be reallocated directly into premium payments for a life insurance policy. It’s a way to use the structure of your income to fund wealth transfer.