Business Continuation Insurance Calculator

Estimate the life insurance needed to keep your business running after an owner's death, covering operating expenses and transition costs.

About the Business Continuation Insurance Calculator

When a business owner dies, the company doesn't stop incurring expenses. Rent, payroll, utilities, loan payments, and supplier invoices continue — but revenue may drop sharply during the transition. Business continuation insurance (a form of life insurance) provides the cash needed to keep the business operating until new leadership is established or the business is sold.

This calculator estimates coverage based on your monthly operating expenses, expected revenue decline, transition timeline, and any outstanding business debts. The goal is to ensure the business has enough liquidity to survive the disruption without laying off employees, defaulting on obligations, or closing.

This is an educational estimate only, not an actual insurance quote. Consult a licensed insurance professional and your business CPA for a comprehensive continuation plan. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.

Why Use This Business Continuation Insurance Calculator?

A business owner's death creates immediate cash flow pressure. Clients may pause engagements, revenue falls, but fixed costs continue. Without insurance, the business may need to liquidate assets or take on emergency debt at unfavorable terms. Continuation coverage fills the gap and gives the business time to stabilize under new management.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your monthly fixed operating expenses (rent, payroll, utilities, insurance, etc.).
  2. Enter the estimated monthly revenue decline during transition.
  3. Enter the expected transition period in months.
  4. Enter outstanding business debts to be covered.
  5. Enter any one-time costs (legal, consulting, recruitment for new management).
  6. Review the total continuation insurance need.

Formula

Continuation Need = (Monthly Expenses × Transition Months) + (Revenue Decline × Transition Months) + Business Debts + One-Time Costs

Example Calculation

Result: $980,000

Operating expenses ($45,000 × 12 = $540,000) + Revenue decline buffer ($20,000 × 12 = $240,000) + Business debts ($150,000) + One-time costs ($50,000) = $980,000.

Tips & Best Practices

Why Business Continuation Insurance Is Essential

According to the SBA, about half of small businesses do not have a succession plan. Without insurance, the death of a sole owner can trigger immediate financial distress — suppliers may tighten credit, banks may call loans, and employees may leave. Insurance provides the liquidity to avoid these cascading failures.

Building a Comprehensive Plan

Business continuation insurance works best as part of a broader plan that includes a buy-sell agreement, a written succession plan, key person insurance, and cross-training of key roles. The insurance provides the financial foundation, but organizational preparedness determines whether the business survives long-term.

Choosing the Right Coverage

Term life insurance is often the most cost-effective choice, especially when matched to a specific planning horizon (e.g., 20 years until planned retirement). Permanent life insurance adds flexibility with cash value that the business can access during the owner's lifetime for other needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is business continuation insurance?

Business continuation insurance is life insurance purchased to fund the ongoing operation of a business after an owner's death. The proceeds cover operating expenses, revenue shortfalls, debts, and transition costs while new leadership takes over or the business is sold.

How is this different from key person insurance?

Key person insurance replaces the economic value of a specific individual. Business continuation insurance focuses on keeping the entire business operating — covering fixed costs, payroll, and debts — regardless of which specific role the deceased filled.

How long of a transition period should I plan for?

Most experts recommend 12-24 months. Finding new leadership, rebuilding client confidence, and stabilizing operations takes time. Businesses with strong management teams may need less; owner-dependent businesses may need more.

Should the business or the owner purchase the policy?

Typically the business owns the policy, pays the premiums, and is the beneficiary. This ensures the proceeds go directly to the business for its operational needs. Individual policies can work but create potential estate and tax complications.

What happens if the business is sold instead of continued?

If the business is sold, insurance proceeds can cover debts and wind-down costs, or be used to enhance the sale price by ensuring the business is stable and profitable when the buyer takes over. The proceeds can also bridge the gap between the owner's death and the closing of the sale, covering operating expenses during the transition. Coordinating the insurance with a buy-sell agreement ensures proceeds are allocated properly between the estate and the business.

Can I combine this with a buy-sell agreement?

Yes, and you should. A buy-sell agreement handles ownership transfer, while continuation insurance keeps the business running during the transition. Together, they form a comprehensive succession plan.

Are premiums tax-deductible?

Generally, premiums for business-owned life insurance are not tax-deductible. However, the death benefit is received income-tax-free. Consult your CPA for specifics related to your business structure and policy ownership.

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