No. 178 – How life insurance can protect your spouse if you’re the co-owner of a business

by | Nov 20, 2024 | Business, Financial Planning, Life Cover

Question

I founded a successful business 20 years ago with two others. All three of us are actively involved in its day-to-day management. As it is September, I took another look at my will where I have bequeathed my shares in the business to my wife.

While I trust my fellow directors, I am not sure that my wife will get the full benefit from these shares going forward as she will not be actively involved in the running of the company.

How do I structure my affairs to ensure that she is fairly treated?

Answer

There are many ways of extracting value from a company and if someone is not actively involved and is thought to be benefiting by more than the value that is being added, they may find the dividend flows stagnating while the executive directors improve their remuneration from other structures.

Unless your spouse or children have a desire to get actively involved with the company, it is often best to make a clean break.   This can be set up as follows: 

  • Have the company valued

 You should get an independent person the value of the company so that you know exactly what your shareholding is worth.  This should be done annually to ensure that you are always working with the correct numbers.  SARS does offer guidelines on how they could go about valuing a company. 

  • Use life insurance to pay for the shares of any deceased directors

 Your co-directors would take out life insurance cover on to the value of your shareholding. They would pay the premiums on this cover in the same ratio that they would enjoy the benefit payout.  This cover of should be revised annually to take into account the increasing value of the business. 

  • Set up a contract to commit to buy the shares of a director upon their death

 This is often known as a buy and sell contract.  Here your fellow directors commit to buying your shares in the company upon your death.  This would be funded by the life insurance that they took out on your life.

What is nice about the solution is that it is a clean break. Should you pass away, your wife would be paid out the full value of your shareholding in the company.  She need not worry about your fellow directors doing things that may prejudice her income stream. She would have access to a capital sum which you could invest to provide her with an ongoing flow of income that she can control.

On the other hand, your fellow directors would have more freedom to make decisions on the direction of the company without having to consider shareholders who are not involved with the company.

This solution can also be used to pay back director loan accounts without putting too much financial strain on the company.

You can also use this solution to pay out a benefit should a director become permanently disabled and unable to actively contribute to the running of the business.

There are times when life insurance can make a significant difference. This is certainly one of those instances.

KENNY MEIRING IS AN INDEPENDENT FINANCIAL ADVISER

Contact him via phone, email or via contact phone on the financialwellnesscoach.co.za website

Read more of our articles on the Daily Maverick website or newspaper weekly!

Oct 20 2025

No. 228 – Plan for the everyday while estate is wound up

Question We are married in community of property and are worried that if one of us dies, everything will be frozen for months or maybe years while the estate is wound...
Oct 20 2025

No. 227 – Ensuring property transfers are fair for all heirs

Question I am 80 years old and have a daughter who lives in my rental property.  She will inherit it when I pass away. She would like  to take over the ownership now. ...
Oct 07 2025

No. 226 – Money priorities every graduate should know

Question I will be finishing university next month and know nothing about financial planning. What should I prioritise?Answer Start with the only asset you already own...
Sep 30 2025

No. 225 – Restructure your assets sensibly to preserve the money for heirs

Question I’m a widow with a terminal diagnosis. I want my two children, both in their 50s, to inherit with minimum cost and delay. I have R5 million in bank accounts,...
Sep 25 2025

No. 224 – Untangle financial choices before tying the knot

Question My partner and I are getting married in December and need to decide whether we are doing it in community of property or with an ante-nuptial contract. Then...
Sep 16 2025

No. 223 – Time plus compound interest equals big returns

Question I’m a 74-year-old ‘financially illiterate’ gran learning so much from your column. I have a newborn grandson and would like to start some sort of ‘fund’ for...
Sep 08 2025

No. 222 – Structures and strategies to help create lasting family wealth

Question I have built up a substantial set of assets and have no debt. How do I structure my finances to create long-term wealth for my children and...
Aug 31 2025

No. 221 – Buy-and-sell structures are crucial for businesses

Question I run a business with two partners. Things are fine now, but what if one of us dies? A friend passed away last year, and it ended up in a messy legal fight...
Aug 28 2025

No. 220 – How to strike the right balance between caution and growth

Question With inflation now around 3%, the Reserve Bank cut rates by 0.25%. That’s great for borrowers, but I’m a 68-year-old pensioner living off the interest from a...
Aug 19 2025

No. 219 – Using extra money smartly can maximise your retirement funds

Question My spouse has no pension or retirement fund. He has just sold a property and now has a few million in the bank. Can we put that into my pension or retirement...

Download the Life File