Buy-sell agreements can sound complicated, but the core idea is simple:
If one business owner dies, what happens to their share of the business?
Without a plan, the surviving owner and the deceased owner’s family can be left with confusion, conflict, and financial risk. A buy-sell agreement helps prevent that.
When talking with business owners, the easiest way to introduce this topic is to ask: If your business partner passed away, would you want to be in business with their spouse or family?
Most people say no.
Then ask the second question: If you died, would you want your family depending on your business partner to keep the company successful so they eventually get paid?
Again, most owners say no.
That is why buy-sell planning matters.
A buy-sell agreement is a legal agreement between business owners that determines:
Its purpose is to create clarity before a crisis happens.
This is an important point: the agreement and the insurance are not the same thing.
A business can have a buy-sell agreement without life insurance, but that does not mean the buyout is fully funded.
If there is no funding in place, the surviving owner may need to:
That creates risk for the family of the deceased owner.
Life insurance solves that by creating immediate liquidity at exactly the right time.
With an entity purchase, the business buys back the deceased owner’s share.
This can be simpler in some situations, especially with multiple owners.
With a cross purchase, the surviving owner buys the deceased owner’s share directly from the estate or family.
In many cases, this is the preferred approach because it can offer cleaner planning and avoid some common issues.
When there are three or more owners, cross purchase planning can get messy fast. Each owner may need policies on all the others, which creates complexity.
That is why an insurance partnership can be a strong solution.
An insurance partnership is a separate entity created to hold the policies for the buy-sell arrangement.
This can help by:
It can also open the door to longer-term planning opportunities.
A common assumption is that buy-sell funding should always use term insurance.
That is not always true.
Depending on the goals of the owners, permanent insurance may also make sense, especially when cash value accumulation or long-term planning is important.
This conversation is relevant for almost any business with partners.
The business does not need to be huge. If it has value and more than one owner, there is usually a reason to discuss buy-sell planning.
Good opportunities often include businesses that are:
Buy-sell planning should not happen in a vacuum.
The right team often includes:
A qualified attorney should draft the agreement, and the CPA should help review tax and structural considerations.
Many business owners do not know what their business is worth.
That makes this an easy entry point:
If one of you died, how much would need to be paid to the family?
If they do not know, a professional valuation can help move the conversation forward and give everyone a clearer starting point.
Buy-sell agreements are about protecting both the business and the family.
For advisors, the opportunity is not in overexplaining the technical details. It is in starting the conversation.
A simple question can uncover a major planning need:
What happens to the business if one of the partners dies?
If there is no clear answer, there is probably an opportunity to help.
We cover this topic in more detail in the full podcast episode, including cross purchase vs. entity purchase, insurance funding, and planning considerations for multi-owner businesses.