Without a formal partnership protection arrangement, the death of a business partner triggers an immediate ownership crisis. Their share does not simply remain with the business; it passes to their estate, which may have no interest in the business, no patience for a prolonged negotiation, and no obligation to accept a valuation that suits the surviving partners. The financial and operational disruption that follows can destroy a business that was otherwise entirely viable.
Partnership protection insurance, combined with a properly drafted cross-option agreement, ensures that if a business partner dies or becomes critically ill, the surviving partners can purchase their share of the business at a fair valuation, funded by the insurance payout. Without this arrangement in place, the consequences of losing a partner can be severe and long-lasting: their share passes to their estate, which may demand an immediate buyout at an inconvenient valuation, or which may retain the shareholding and introduce a family member or executor with no business involvement into the ownership structure. Vsure Financial advises partnership and shareholder arrangements across sole traders, formal partnerships, and limited liability structures, ensuring both the insurance and the supporting legal documentation work together as a complete protection solution.
Your complete guide to Partnership Protection
The risk of having no partnership protection
Without a formal partnership protection arrangement, the share of a deceased partner passes to their estate under the terms of their will, or, where no will exists, under the rules of intestacy. In either case, the outcome for the surviving partners is uncertain and potentially damaging. The estate may retain the share and assert rights over the business, including the right to inspect accounts, participate in major decisions, or challenge the way the partnership is managed. The estate may demand an immediate sale of the business to realise the deceased's share in cash. The surviving partners may have a legal right to buy the share, but no ready access to the funds required to complete the purchase, particularly where the value is significant. Each of these scenarios can disrupt trading, damage client and supplier relationships, and in extreme cases force the closure of an otherwise viable business. A cross-option agreement and partnership protection insurance address all of these risks with a single, well-structured arrangement.
How a cross-option agreement and insurance work together
A cross-option agreement, sometimes called a double option agreement, is a legally binding document that gives the surviving partners the right, but not the obligation, to purchase the deceased partner's share from their estate. It simultaneously gives the estate the right, but not the obligation, to require the surviving partners to purchase it. This balanced structure is important for Inheritance Tax purposes: because neither party is contractually obliged to complete the transaction, the arrangement does not fall within the definition of a binding contract for sale and does not trigger an automatic Inheritance Tax charge on the value of the shares at the point of death. The value at which the shares change hands is agreed in advance, typically based on a professional valuation of the business at the time the agreement is drawn up, with a mechanism for periodic revaluation. The insurance payout, received by the surviving partners on the death of the insured, funds the purchase directly. The transaction completes, the business continues under existing management, and the deceased's family receives fair value for their relative's share.
Critical illness cover: extending protection beyond death
Partnership protection can be extended to cover critical illness as well as death, addressing the scenario where a partner is diagnosed with a serious condition and is no longer able to contribute to the business in the way they previously did. The insurance mechanism is the same: the policy pays on a qualifying diagnosis, the surviving partners use the payout to purchase the incapacitated partner's share, and the business continues without disruption. Critical illness cover in a partnership context is particularly valuable because a seriously ill partner who retains their share may have conflicting interests: they may need liquidity from the business to fund treatment and living costs, while the surviving partners need to maintain operational stability and protect the business from an unplanned change in ownership. A well-structured partnership protection arrangement prevents this tension from arising by providing a clear, pre-agreed, fully funded mechanism for the transition.
Valuing the business and keeping the arrangement current
The effectiveness of a partnership protection arrangement depends entirely on the insurance sum insured accurately reflecting the current value of each partner's share. If the business grows significantly in value between the time the arrangement is set up and the time a claim is made, an under-insured partner's estate may not receive fair value, and the surviving partners may not receive sufficient funds to complete the buyout without supplementing the insurance payout from other resources. Partnership protection arrangements should be reviewed periodically, at least every two to three years, or whenever the business undergoes a significant change in value or structure. The addition of a new partner, the departure of an existing one, a significant contract win, or a major asset acquisition are all events that should trigger a review. Your Vsure adviser will help establish the arrangement correctly and advise on an appropriate review schedule to ensure it remains fit for purpose as the business evolves.