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Family Trusts vs. Corporate-Owned Life Insurance (COLI): Which Strategy is Right for You?

When it comes to building and preserving wealth, Canadian business owners and high-net-worth families have several powerful tools at their disposal. Two of the most commonly discussed are Family Trusts and Corporate-Owned Life Insurance (COLI). While both can support tax efficiency, estate planning, and wealth transfer, they operate very differently. Understanding their unique advantages — and limitations — is essential before deciding which approach aligns with your goals.

What is a Family Trust?

A Family Trust is a legal arrangement where a trustee holds assets on behalf of beneficiaries (usually family members). The key advantage is income splitting and tax planning flexibility. By allocating income or capital gains to beneficiaries in lower tax brackets, a trust can reduce the overall family tax burden.

  • Benefits of Family Trusts:
  • Income Splitting: Distribute income to adult beneficiaries in lower tax brackets.
  • Estate Planning: Pass assets to the next generation outside of probate.
  • Creditor Protection: Assets in trust are generally protected from personal claims.
  • Control & Flexibility: The trustee controls how and when beneficiaries receive benefits.
  • Limitations:
  • Subject to the 21-year deemed disposition rule in Canada.
  • Requires annual tax filings and professional administration.
  • Does not generate new liquidity at death — assets are transferred but no fresh cash is created.

What is Corporate-Owned Life Insurance (COLI)?

COLI is life insurance owned by a corporation, with the corporation as the beneficiary. The policy insures a shareholder or key individual, and when that person passes away, the death benefit flows tax-free into the corporation’s Capital Dividend Account (CDA). This allows tax-free distribution of funds to shareholders or heirs.

  • Benefits of COLI:
  • Tax-Free Death Benefit: Creates immediate liquidity for estate settlement, tax liabilities, or wealth transfer.
  • Tax-Advantaged Growth: Policy cash values grow on a tax-deferred basis inside the corporation.
  • Access During Lifetime: Some policies allow borrowing or withdrawals against cash value for retirement or business needs.
  • Corporate Efficiency: Premiums are paid with corporate after-tax dollars (often more efficient than personal).
  • Limitations:
  • Requires insurability — if the insured is uninsurable, COLI may not be an option.
  • Premiums can be significant, especially for permanent policies.
  • Does not provide direct control over asset allocation across generations.

Key Comparison: Family Trusts vs. COLI

Feature Family Trust Corporate-Owned Life Insurance (COLI)
Primary Purpose Tax-efficient income splitting & estate planning Tax-efficient wealth transfer & liquidity creation
When Benefits Occur Ongoing during trust’s life (income allocation) Primarily at death (with some living benefits via cash value)
Liquidity Creation No new liquidity; distributes existing assets Generates tax-free cash at death
Tax Advantages Income splitting, probate bypass CDA credit, tax-deferred growth, tax-free death benefit
Complexities 21-year deemed disposition rule, ongoing filings Premium funding, medical underwriting
Best For Families seeking ongoing tax planning & control Business owners seeking efficient wealth transfer & estate liquidity

Which Should You Choose?

If your priority is ongoing income splitting, control, and multi-generational estate planning, a Family Trust may be the better fit.

If your priority is tax-efficient wealth transfer, estate liquidity, and leveraging corporate dollars, COLI can be extremely powerful.

In many cases, the two strategies are not mutually exclusive. Sophisticated planning often involves using Family Trusts in combination with COLI — the trust provides ongoing tax efficiency and governance, while COLI provides liquidity and tax-free capital upon death.

Final Thoughts

Both Family Trusts and Corporate-Owned Life Insurance are advanced planning tools that, when structured properly, can significantly reduce taxes, protect assets, and build lasting wealth. The right choice depends on your personal circumstances, family dynamics, and long-term goals.

Before making a decision, it’s essential to consult with experienced tax, legal, and financial advisors who understand how to integrate these strategies into a holistic wealth plan.

At Valemont Capital, we specialize in designing tax-efficient wealth transfer strategies for business owners and families. Whether through trust structures, COLI, or a blended approach, we can help you maximize wealth for both today and the next generation.