When clients think about leaving wealth to the next generation, they often focus on how much they have saved. But for financial advisors, the better question is: How will that wealth transfer after taxes, timelines, and liquidity needs are considered?
Two common tools in legacy and succession planning are IRAs and life insurance. Both can help clients transfer wealth, but they do very different jobs.
An IRA is primarily a retirement income asset. Life insurance is primarily a liquidity and legacy planning tool. Knowing when to use each can help advisors create more effective, tax-aware strategies for clients, families, and business owners.
A traditional IRA can be a powerful retirement savings vehicle because it allows tax-deferred growth during the account owner’s lifetime. But when the IRA passes to beneficiaries, the tax treatment can become more complicated.
Many non-spouse beneficiaries who inherit an IRA are subject to distribution rules that may require the account to be emptied within 10 years. For traditional IRAs, those distributions are generally taxable as income to the beneficiary. That can create a problem if heirs are already in their peak earning years.
Life insurance works differently. When structured properly, life insurance proceeds paid to beneficiaries are generally received income-tax-free. That makes life insurance especially useful when the client’s goal is to create liquidity, equalize inheritances, or support a business succession plan.
In simple terms:
An IRA transfers an account balance that may carry future income tax obligations.
Life insurance transfers a death benefit that is generally income-tax-free to beneficiaries.
For advisors, that distinction can open the door to more meaningful planning conversations.
IRAs are often one of a client’s largest assets, but they are not always the most efficient asset to leave to family members.
When beneficiaries inherit a traditional IRA, they may face required distributions and income taxes. This can reduce the actual amount they keep and limit their flexibility. A $1 million IRA may not feel like a $1 million inheritance once taxes and distribution rules are factored in.
That does not mean IRAs are poor planning tools. They simply need to be matched with the right strategy.
An IRA may be useful in wealth transfer planning when:
For some clients, leaving IRA assets to charity while using life insurance or nonqualified assets for family members may create a more tax-efficient legacy plan.
Life insurance can be especially valuable because it creates liquidity exactly when clients and families often need it most.
For business owners, farmers, real estate investors, and high-net-worth families, much of the estate may be tied up in illiquid assets. The family may have wealth on paper, but not enough cash to handle taxes, debt, operating costs, buyouts, or family obligations.
Life insurance can help provide that cash.
Advisors may use life insurance strategies to help clients:
For example, a business owner may want one child to inherit the company while another child receives an equivalent inheritance. Without liquidity, that situation can create conflict. Life insurance can help provide a separate pool of funds, allowing the business to stay intact while still treating heirs fairly.
Clients may not fully understand the differences between IRAs and life insurance. They may assume all inherited assets work the same way. They may also underestimate how taxes, beneficiary designations, policy ownership, and estate planning documents can affect the outcome.
That is where advisors can add significant value.
A strong wealth transfer review should include:
The goal is not to position life insurance against IRAs. The goal is to use each asset where it fits best.
IRAs can remain focused on retirement income and tax-aware distribution planning. Life insurance can help provide liquidity, predictability, and legacy protection.
Together, they can create a more complete succession planning strategy.
To start the conversation, advisors can ask:
“Do you want this asset to provide retirement income, or do you want it to transfer efficiently to the next generation?”
“Will your heirs need income, liquidity, control, or flexibility?”
“Would your current beneficiary designations create the outcome you actually want?”
“If your business or estate had to transition tomorrow, where would the cash come from?”
These questions help clients move beyond product conversations and into planning conversations.
When comparing IRAs vs. life insurance for wealth transfer, the right answer depends on the client’s goals.
An IRA can be an excellent retirement income tool, but it may create taxable income for heirs. Life insurance can provide an income-tax-advantaged death benefit and much-needed liquidity for family or business succession planning.
For financial advisors, the opportunity is to help clients coordinate both tools in a way that supports their retirement, protects their legacy, and simplifies the transition for the people they care about most.
At Advisors Resource Company, we help make these strategies easier to understand and easier to implement. Whether you are reviewing IRA beneficiary planning, exploring life insurance for wealth transfer, or helping a business owner prepare for succession, ARC can support you through every part of the process — from case design and carrier selection to illustrations, underwriting, and client-ready explanations.
You do not have to navigate complex legacy planning conversations alone. ARC helps advisors bring clarity, confidence, and strategy to the table.