Modified Endowment Contracts (MECs)
A Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) is a life insurance policy that has been funded too quickly relative to its death benefit. MECs lose some of the favorable tax treatment of regular life insurance.
The 7-Pay Test
The 7-pay test determines whether a life insurance policy becomes a MEC. A policy becomes a MEC if:
The cumulative premiums paid at any point during the first 7 years exceed the total of the level annual premiums that would have been required to pay up the policy in 7 years.
How the 7-Pay Test Works
The insurance company calculates the 7-pay premium - the level annual premium needed to fully pay up the policy in exactly 7 years using guaranteed assumptions.
| Year | 7-Pay Premium Limit (Cumulative) | Actual Premiums Paid | MEC Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $10,000 | $8,000 | Not MEC |
| 2 | $20,000 | $18,000 | Not MEC |
| 3 | $30,000 | $35,000 | BECOMES MEC |
Key Point: Once a policy becomes a MEC, it remains a MEC forever. The MEC status cannot be reversed.
When the 7-Pay Test Restarts
The 7-pay test restarts (new 7-year period begins) when there is a material change to the policy:
- Increase in death benefit (except due to corridor requirements)
- Exchange or conversion to a new policy
- Addition of certain riders that increase benefits
A reduction in death benefit does NOT trigger a new 7-pay test, but it may cause the policy to retroactively become a MEC.
LIFO Taxation of MEC Distributions
The most significant difference between MECs and non-MECs is the taxation of distributions:
| Distribution Type | Non-MEC Treatment | MEC Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Withdrawals | FIFO (basis first) | LIFO (gain first) |
| Policy loans | Not taxable | Taxable as distribution |
| Partial surrenders | FIFO | LIFO |
| Pledging as collateral | Not taxable | Taxable as distribution |
LIFO (Last-In, First-Out) means the gain is distributed first, making every dollar withdrawn taxable until all gains are exhausted.
Example: MEC vs. Non-MEC Withdrawal
Policy Details:
- Cash value: $100,000
- Premiums paid (basis): $60,000
- Gain: $40,000
- Withdrawal: $25,000
| Non-MEC | MEC | |
|---|---|---|
| Taxable amount | $0 | $25,000 |
| Tax treatment | Basis comes out first | Gain comes out first |
10% Penalty Tax
MECs are subject to a 10% additional tax on the taxable portion of distributions taken before age 59½.
Exceptions to the 10% Penalty:
- Distributions after reaching age 59½
- Distributions due to death
- Distributions due to disability
- Substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP) over life expectancy
Exam Tip: The 10% penalty applies only to the TAXABLE portion of the distribution, not the entire amount.
Penalty Calculation Example
- MEC distribution: $30,000
- Taxable portion (gain): $20,000
- Taxpayer age: 45
Tax consequences:
- Ordinary income tax on $20,000
- 10% penalty on $20,000 = $2,000
Death Benefit Treatment
Good News for MEC Policyowners:
Despite the unfavorable taxation of living distributions, MEC death benefits retain the same tax treatment as non-MECs:
- Death benefits are still income tax-free to beneficiaries
- Transfer for value rules still apply
- Estate tax treatment is unchanged
This is why MECs can still be appropriate for clients who:
- Want tax-free death benefits
- Don't need to access cash value during lifetime
- Can leave money untouched until death
Avoiding MEC Status
Strategies to avoid creating a MEC:
- Spread premiums over 7+ years - Don't overfund early
- Increase death benefit - Higher death benefit = higher 7-pay limit
- Use higher-cost policy types - Traditional whole life has higher limits than universal life
- Monitor 7-pay limit - Know your policy's limit before paying premiums
When MECs May Be Appropriate
| Appropriate for MEC | NOT Appropriate for MEC |
|---|---|
| Estate planning | Need for policy loans |
| Legacy planning | Retirement income supplement |
| Wealth transfer | "Bank on yourself" strategies |
| Premium financing | Living benefits focus |
| Single premium purchases | Cash value access planned |
Which of the following is TRUE about Modified Endowment Contracts (MECs)?
A 50-year-old policyowner takes a $40,000 withdrawal from a MEC with $60,000 in cash value and $35,000 in basis. What are the tax consequences?
Which of the following events would cause the 7-pay test to restart?
17.3 Estate and Gift Tax Considerations
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