Preserving wealth and minimizing taxes for family

How we helped a widow protect her late husband’s investments and maximize what passed to her children.

Margaret’s daughter’S STORY

Losing a loved one can leave families with difficult financial questions, especially when major assets are at stake. This story shows how Margaret worked with Lisa to protect her late husband’s legacy, avoid taxes and create a plan that safeguarded her children’s future. For new Clients it shows how the right strategy turns uncertainty into clarity and preserves family wealth for the next generation.

Situation

When Margaret called Lisa one spring afternoon, her voice was steady, but weary. She had recently lost her husband, Robert, a successful entrepreneur who had always managed their finances with care and precision. Years earlier, Robert had sold his business and invested the proceeds, nearly $2 million, into a passive investment corporation.

Now, Margaret was the sole shareholder of that corporation. She had a reliable retirement income, no debts, and didn’t need the funds for day-to-day living. But she carried a question that kept her up at night:

“Lisa, I don’t need this money… but I want to make sure it ends up with my children — not with the CRA.”

Lisa listened with care and reassurance. She knew that while Margaret didn’t need the money for herself, she wanted to protect it for her family. But the corporate structure had hidden tax traps. If left untouched, more than half the wealth could disappear in taxes upon Margaret’s death.

It was time for a smarter solution, one that honoured Robert’s legacy and protected their children’s future.

Process

Lisa examined the details and recommended a back-to-back Annuity Strategy, specifically designed for corporately held funds that aren’t needed for lifestyle.

Here’s how they implemented it:

  • Step 1: Prescribed Annuity Purchase The corporation used a portion of the investment funds to purchase a prescribed annuity on Margaret’s life. This created a reliable stream of tax-efficient income for the corporation, largely taxed as return of capital.
  • Step 2: Fund Permanent Life Insurance The annuity payments were used to fund a corporate-owned whole life insurance policy on Margaret’s life. The policy named the children as beneficiaries through the corporation’s Capital Dividend Account (CDA), ensuring the proceeds would flow out tax-free.
  • Step 3: Preserve and Maximize Estate Value The life insurance policy not only protected the capital, it enhanced it. Lisa projected that the eventual payout would exceed the original $2 million invested.

Lisa coordinated with Margaret’s accountant and lawyer, ensuring every detail aligned with her long-term wishes. The strategy was clean, efficient and designed to last for years to come.

Outcome

When Margaret passed away years later, the plan worked exactly as intended. The life insurance policy paid out $2.5 million, tax-free, into the corporation. From there, it flowed through the CDA and into the hands of her children without triggering personal income tax.

There were tears, of course, but also deep gratitude. Margaret’s daughter later told Lisa:

“My parents worked so hard. And because of you, we got to keep what they built, not lose it to taxes.”

Lisa wasn’t just their advisor. She was the architect of a lasting legacy, a financial plan that carried forward love, foresight and smart decisions made at exactly the right time.

True peace of mind comes when you know the people you love will benefit from what you built, not lose it to taxes.

Lisa

Lisa