Back to Florida

SB0894 • 2026

Restrictions on Employer-owned Life Insurance Policies

Restrictions on Employer-owned Life Insurance Policies

Labor Taxes
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Martin
Last action
2026-03-13
Official status
Senate - Died in Banking and Insurance
Effective date
2026-07-01

Plain English Breakdown

Checked against official source text during the last sync.

Restrictions on Employer-owned Life Insurance Policies

This bill sets rules for employer-owned life insurance policies and limits when employers can buy such policies for their employees.

What This Bill Does

  • Defines what 'employer-owned life insurance' means, including company-owned or corporate-owned life insurance.
  • Allows employers to purchase life insurance on key persons only if certain conditions are met, like getting written consent from the employee and providing notice to family members.
  • Prohibits employers from buying policies for rank-and-file employees unless specific exceptions apply.
  • Requires insurers to report employer-owned life insurance policies to a state office and maintain an online registry.
  • Makes premiums, loan interest, and expenses related to these policies not tax deductible.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Employers who want to buy life insurance for their employees.
  • Employees whose employers might purchase life insurance on them.
  • Insurance companies that issue employer-owned life insurance policies.

Terms To Know

Key person
An owner, senior executive, director, officer, partner, or manager of a business entity whose death would cause direct financial harm to the company.
Rank-and-file employee
Any employee who is not considered a key person.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify how it will be enforced or what happens if an employer violates its rules.
  • It's unclear how many employers currently have policies that would be affected by this new law.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-13 Senate

    • Died in Banking and Insurance

  2. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  3. 2025-12-16 Senate

    • Referred to Banking and Insurance; Appropriations Committee on Agriculture, Environment, and General Government; Fiscal Policy

  4. 2025-12-12 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Restrictions on Employer-owned Life Insurance Policies; Authorizing employer-owned life insurance policies covering certain key persons of business entities, organizations, companies, and corporations under specified circumstances; providing that premiums, loan interests, and expenses related to employer-owned life insurance are not tax deductible; specifying that insurers that violate certain provisions are subject to a fine of up to $1 million per violation and may have its authority to transact insurance suspended or revoked, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

SB 894

By
Senator Martin

33-01125-26 2026894__
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to restrictions on employer-owned life
3 insurance policies; creating s. 627.4635, F.S.;
4 providing definitions; authorizing employer-owned life
5 insurance policies covering certain key persons of
6 business entities, organizations, companies, and
7 corporations under specified circumstances; requiring
8 certain disclosures to such key persons; prohibiting
9 employer-owned life insurance policies covering
10 certain employees; providing that policies covering
11 such employees are void as against public policy;
12 requiring insurer notice to the Office of Insurance
13 Regulation of employer-owned life insurance policies;
14 requiring the office to maintain a registry and to
15 publish an annual report; requiring certain employer
16 disclosures relating to employer-owned life insurance
17 policies; providing that premiums, loan interests, and
18 expenses related to employer-owned life insurance are
19 not tax deductible; subjecting death benefits received
20 by employers to corporate income tax; providing an
21 exception; providing penalties; specifying that
22 employees’ families have a specified private right of
23 action under certain circumstances; specifying that
24 insurers that violate certain provisions are subject
25 to a fine of up to $1 million per violation and may
26 have its authority to transact insurance suspended or
27 revoked; requiring the office to adopt certain
28 standard forms by a specified date; providing
29 applicability and retroactive applicability; providing
30 construction; providing an effective date.
31
32 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
33
34 Section 1. Section 627.4635, Florida Statutes, is created
35 to read:
36
627.4635

Restrictions on employer-owned life insurance

37
policies.—

38
(1)

DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:

39
(a)

“Employer-owned life insurance” means a life insurance

40
policy owned by, or payable to, an employer on the life of a

41
current or former employee. The term also includes company-owned

42
life insurance or corporate-owned life insurance, a life

43
insurance policy owned by, or payable, to a company or

44
corporation, rather than an individual, on the life of a current

45
or former employee.

46
(b)

“Key person” means an owner, senior executive,

47
director, officer, partner, or manager of a business entity,

48
organization, company, or corporation whose death would cause

49
direct, material financial harm to the business entity,

50
organization, company, or corporation.

51
(c)

“Rank-and-file employee” means any employee who is not

52
a key person.

53
(2)

EMPLOYER-OWNED LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES COVERING KEY

54
PERSONS.—

55
(a)

An employer may purchase, maintain, or be a beneficiary

56
of an employer-owned life insurance policy covering a key person

57
only if all the following conditions are met:

58
1.

The employer has obtained the key person’s informed,

59
written, and revocable consent before purchasing the policy.

60
2.

The employer has provided written notice of the policy

61
to the key person’s spouse, next of kin, or estate

62
representative within 30 days after issuance of the policy.

63
3.

The employer does not maintain more than five key person

64
policies at any one time without prior approval of the office.

65
The five key persons must be the five highest ranking persons in

66
the employer’s business, organization, company, or corporation,

67
based on their seniority, salaries, and benefits.

68
4.

The death benefit of any key person’s policy does not

69
exceed five times that key person’s average annual compensation

70
for the 3 years immediately preceding issuance.

71
5.

Upon the key person’s termination of employment, the

72
employer either cancels the policy or, with the key person’s

73
written consent, transfers ownership to the key person or his or

74
her family.

75
(b)1.

If an employer-owner life insurance policy is issued

76
before July 1, 2026, and all the conditions in paragraph (a) are

77
met, the employer must, by January 1, 2027, provide to the key

78
person whose life is covered by the employer-owne
d
life

79
insurance policy the standard form described in subsection (7),

80
which informs the key person that the policy does not benefit

81
the key person, but fully benefits the employer, and that the

82
key person has the option to opt out of the policy.

83
2.

If an employer-owne
d
life insurance policy is issued on

84
or after July 1, 2026, and before October 1, 2026, the employer

85
must, before purchasing the policy, inform the key person whose

86
life is covered by the employer-owne
d
life insurance policy that

87
the policy does not benefit the key person, but fully benefits

88
the employer, and that the key person has the option to reject

89
the policy.

90
3.

If an employer-owne
d
life insurance policy is issued on

91
or after October 1, 2026, the employer must, before purchasing

92
the policy, provide to the key person the standard form

93
described in subsection (7), which informs the key person that

94
the policy does not benefit the key person, but fully benefits

95
the employer, and that the key person has the option to reject

96
the policy.

97
(3)

CERTAIN EMPLOYER-OWNED LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES

98
PROHIBITED.—

99
(a)

Except as provided in
subsection (7)
, an employer may

100
not purchase, maintain, or be a beneficiary of an employer-owned

101
life insurance policy if the policy covers a rank-and-file

102
employee or if any of the conditions described in subsection (2)

103
are not met.

104
(b)

Any insurance policy purchased or maintained in

105
violation of paragraph (a) is void as against public policy.

106
(4)

NOTICES; REGISTRY AND REPORTING.—

107
(a)

Each insurer issuing an employer-owned life insurance

108
policy shall file notice with the office. The notice must

109
include the employer’s name, the number of employees insured,

110
and the aggregate face value of the policies.

111
(b)

The office shall maintain a publicly searchable online

112
registry of the filings under paragraph (a) and shall publish an

113
annual report of such filings.

114
(c)

An employer that purchases, maintains, or is a

115
beneficiary of an employer-owned life insurance policy shall

116
inform all key persons and shall publicly disclose, such as

117
through publication on the employer’s publicly available

118
Internet website, that the employer has met all the requirements

119
of this section.

120
(5)

TAX TREATMENT.—

121
(a)

Premiums, loan interest, or related expenses for

122
employer-owned life insurance are not deductible under the law
s

123
of this state.

124
(b)

Any death benefit received by an employer under an

125
employer-owned life insurance policy is subject to corporate

126
income tax unless paid directly to the employee’s estate or

127
family.

128
(6)

ENFORCEMENT AND PENALTIES.—

129
(a)

An employer that violates this section is liable for

130
civil penalties up to five times the death benefit collected.

131
(b)

An employee’s family has a private right of action to

132
recover the full value of any benefit collected in violation of

133
this section.

134
(c)

An insurer that knowingly issues or administers a

135
policy in violation of this section is subject to an

136
administrative fine of up to $1 million per violation and may

137
have its authority to transact insurance in this state suspended

138
or revoked.

139
(7)

STANDARD FORM.—By October 1, 2026, the office shall

140
adopt a standard form, written in plain and simple language,

141
informing a key person that an employer-owned life insurance

142
policy does not benefit the key person, but fully benefits the

143
employer, and that the key person has the option to reject or

144
opt out of the policy.

145
(8)

APPLICABILITY.—

146
(a)

This section applies to all new policies issued on or

147
after July 1, 2026.

148
(b)

The restrictions on and the prohibitions against

149
employer-owned life insurance policies under subsections (2) and

150
(3), respectively, apply retroactively to existing policies

151
unless the insured employee or the insured employee’s family

152
affirmatively opts to maintain the policy and is named as the

153
sole beneficiary, in which case all death benefits shall be paid

154
to the employee’s estate or designated family beneficiary.

155
(c)

If any provision of this section is in conflict with

156
any other law, the provisions of this section shall govern.

157 Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.