| Scenario | Annual Distribution | Years | Assets | Return | Inflation | Taxes | Trustee Fee | Suggested Benefit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Family support | $50,000 | 20 | $75,000 | 6% | 3% | 20% | 1% | $1,000,000 |
| Education focus | $30,000 | 15 | $150,000 | 5% | 2.5% | 18% | 0.8% | $450,000 |
| Legacy gifting | $80,000 | 25 | $250,000 | 6.5% | 3% | 22% | 1.2% | $1,600,000 |
- Net return (simplified): rnet = (rgross − fee) × (1 − tax).
- Growing annuity PV: PV = P × (1 − ((1+g)/(1+r))n) ÷ (r − g), where payments start next year.
- Total need at death: PVneed = PVdistributions + lump sums (goals + final expenses).
- Buffered need: PVbuffered = PVneed × (1 + buffer).
- Suggested death benefit: max(0, PVbuffered − existing assets − existing coverage), rounded up.
- Start with a realistic annual distribution goal and time horizon.
- Add one-time goals and final expenses the trust may need.
- Enter existing trust assets and any coverage already in place.
- Use conservative return, inflation, tax, and fee assumptions.
- Review the suggested death benefit and the premium estimate.
- Adjust the cushion buffer to reflect uncertainty and goals.
- Save outputs via CSV/PDF and discuss with advisors.
Why an insurance trust can reduce estate friction
An insurance trust can hold a policy outside an individual’s taxable estate, helping liquidity arrive quickly and privately. Families often need cash for income replacement, debt payoff, and time to settle assets. By naming the trust as owner and beneficiary, proceeds may be directed by the trust terms, supporting minors, special needs beneficiaries, or staged distributions.
Estimating annual income needs for beneficiaries
The calculator starts with an annual distribution goal and a chosen number of years. This often captures a spending stream such as $50,000 for 20 years. It also allows one‑time goals like tuition or a mortgage balance. Existing assets and other coverage reduce the gap so the suggested death benefit focuses on what the trust truly must provide.
Discounting future payouts to today’s dollars
Future payments are discounted using a net return assumption. Net return is the expected investment return minus estimated taxes and trustee fees. The present value of the distribution stream is computed as an annuity when net return differs from inflation. A separate present value is computed for lump‑sum goals.
Adding taxes, trustee fees, and inflation sensitivity
Returns are rarely “headline” returns. Taxes on trust income and ongoing trustee administration can reduce compounding. Inflation increases future spending requirements, so using realistic inflation helps avoid underfunding. The model lets you stress test assumptions: raise inflation or fees, lower returns, and observe how the suggested coverage and premium estimate respond.Revisit inputs annually after major life events, because trust objectives, tax rules, and market expectations can shift materially.
Turning a coverage target into a premium budget
Once the buffered present‑value need is known, the suggested death benefit is rounded for planning and converted to an estimated premium using an age, term length, and risk class factor. The premium estimate is not a quote, but it helps compare funding strategies: higher coverage versus longer term, or a stronger trust reserve versus lower ongoing premiums.
FAQs
What does this calculator estimate?
It estimates a planning-level death benefit that could fund a trust’s projected needs, plus a rough premium range based on risk inputs.
How should I choose expected return and inflation?
Use conservative assumptions. Many planners model returns below long-run averages and inflation near your spending reality, then test higher inflation and lower returns.
Why does it subtract existing assets and coverage?
Existing reserves and other coverage can already support beneficiaries. Subtracting them focuses the suggested benefit on the remaining gap.
What is the buffer percentage for?
The buffer adds a cushion for uncertainty, timing, and model limitations. A higher buffer increases suggested coverage and premium estimates.
Are the premium numbers official quotes?
No. Premiums are simplified estimates. Actual pricing depends on underwriting, product type, riders, jurisdiction, and insurer rules.
Can I share results with an advisor?
Yes. Use the CSV or PDF downloads to share inputs and outputs, then refine assumptions with a qualified insurance and trust professional.