What buy-sell insurance does for Salem County businesses
In rural Salem County, family farms and small manufacturers are the backbone of the economy, and a funded buy-sell agreement is what keeps these multi-owner operations from fracturing after a death. A buy-sell agreement is a legal contract among co-owners; buy-sell insurance is the life insurance that funds it. When an owner dies, the policy pays a benefit the surviving owners use to purchase the deceased owner's interest at a pre-agreed value. The result: the business stays with the people running it, and the late owner's family receives fair cash value instead of an illiquid share they can't use.
Cross-purchase vs. entity-purchase in Salem County
There are two common structures. In a cross-purchase plan, each owner buys a policy on the others, ideal for two- or three-owner Salem County firms. In an entity-purchase (or stock-redemption) plan, the business itself owns the policies and buys back the share, which scales better when there are several owners. The right choice depends on how many owners you have, your tax situation, and how the company is structured, which is worth a short conversation rather than a guess.
Valuing the business and sizing the coverage
A buy-sell agreement is only as good as the valuation behind it. Salem County owners should agree on how the business is valued, by formula, appraisal, or a set figure reviewed regularly, and then fund policies large enough to cover each owner's share at that value. Under-funding is the most common mistake we see; the agreement exists but the insurance doesn't cover the real buyout cost.
Working with a local Salem County agent
As an independent agency, Kevin Brown Insurance Agency compares multiple highly-rated life carriers to fund your buy-sell agreement competitively. Serving Pennsville, Carneys Point, and Woodstown and all of Salem County, we coordinate with your attorney and accountant so the policies and the agreement actually line up, a step that's missed surprisingly often.
