
Key Person Insurance
Table of Contents What Is Key Person Insurance? How It Works Categories of Loss Covered Cost Key person insurance is a life insurance policy that a company purchases on the life of an owner, a top executive, or another individual considered critical to the business. For key person insurance, a company purchases a life insurance policy on certain employee(s), pays the premiums, and is the beneficiary of the policy. Key person insurance is a life insurance policy a company buys on the life of a top executive or another critical individual. In addition to life insurance, key person insurance is also available as disability coverage in case the individual is incapacitated and no longer able to work.

What Is Key Person Insurance?
Key person insurance is a life insurance policy that a company purchases on the life of an owner, a top executive, or another individual considered critical to the business. The company is the beneficiary of the policy and pays the premiums. This type of life insurance is also known as "key man (or "keyman") insurance," "key woman insurance," and "business life insurance."




Understanding Key Person Insurance
Key person insurance offers a financial cushion if the sudden loss of a certain individual would profoundly negatively affect the company's operations. The death benefit essentially buys the company time to find a new person or to implement other strategies to save (or shut down) the business.
In a small business, the key person is usually the owner, the founders, or perhaps a key employee or two. The main qualifying point is whether the person's absence would cause major financial harm to the company. If this is the case, key person insurance is definitely worth considering.
Important
In addition to life insurance, key person insurance is also available as disability coverage in case the individual is incapacitated and no longer able to work.
The Process of Key Person Insurance
For key person insurance, a company purchases a life insurance policy on certain employee(s), pays the premiums, and is the beneficiary of the policy. In the event of the person's death, the company receives the policy's death benefit.
That money can be used to cover the costs of recruiting, hiring, and training a replacement for the deceased person. If the company doesn't believe it can continue operations, it can use the money to pay off debts, distribute money to investors, provide severance benefits to employees, and close the business down in an orderly manner. Key person insurance gives the company some options other than immediate bankruptcy.
To determine whether a business needs this kind of coverage, company leaders must consider who is irreplaceable in the short term. In many small businesses, it's the owner who does most things, such as keeping the books, managing employees, handling key customers, etc. Without this person, the business can come to a stop.
Categories of Loss Covered by Key Person Insurance
Key person insurance can cover a company against a range of risks. For example, it may provide:
- Insurance to protect profits — for example, offsetting lost income from lost sales or losses resulting from the delay or cancellation of any business project involving a key person.
- Insurance designed to protect shareholders or partnership interests. Typically, this enables the surviving shareholders or partners to purchase the financial interests of the deceased person.
- Insurance for anyone involved in guaranteeing business loans or banking facilities. The value of insurance coverage is arranged to equal the value of the guarantee.
Cost of Key Person Insurance
How much insurance a company needs will depend on the size and nature of the business and the key person's role. It's worth asking for quotes on $100,000, $250,000, $500,000, $750,000, and $1 million policies and comparing the costs of each.
The cost will also depend on whether the company buys a term life policy or a permanent life policy. Term life is almost always significantly cheaper.
In addition, the cost of the coverage will vary according to the insured person's age and overall health, just like most other types of life insurance.
One major insurer, for example, would currently charge $107 a month for a $500,000, 20-year term policy on a healthy 50-year-old male. Raising the coverage to $1 million would bring the monthly cost to $190.
Related terms:
Accidental Death Benefit
The accidental death benefit is a payment due to the beneficiary of an accidental death insurance policy. read more
Accidental Death and Dismemberment (AD&D) Insurance
Accidental death and dismemberment (AD&D) insurance is coverage that pays benefits upon the accidental death of an insured or for the accidental loss of a limb. read more
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is a legal proceeding for people or businesses that are unable to repay their outstanding debts. read more
Beneficiary
A beneficiary is any person who gains an advantage or profits from something typically left to them by another individual. read more
Company-Owned Life Insurance (COLI)
Company-owned life insurance is a type of policy that companies purchase to insure against the death of one or more employees. read more
Corporate Ownership of Life Insurance (COLI)
Corporate ownership of life insurance, corporate-owned life insurance, and dead peasant insurance refer to insurance obtained by a company on employees. read more
Death Benefit
A death benefit is a payout to the beneficiary of a life insurance policy, annuity or pension when the insured or annuitant dies. read more
Group Carve-Out Plan
A group carve-out plan is a type of life insurance arrangement that employers can use to reward and retain their key employees. read more
Group Life Insurance
Group life insurance is offered by an employer or other large-scale entity, such as an association or labor organization, to its workers or members. read more
Insurance Premium
An insurance premium is the amount of money an individual or business pays for an insurance policy. read more