Healthcare Provider Update: Healthcare Provider for ConocoPhillips ConocoPhillips provides its employees with access to various healthcare plans through third-party providers, primarily offering services via large insurers such as Blue Cross Blue Shield and UnitedHealthcare. These plans typically include comprehensive medical, vision, and dental coverage tailored to meet the diverse needs of its workforce. Potential Healthcare Cost Increases in 2026 As the healthcare landscape evolves, ConocoPhillips employees can expect significant premium hikes in 2026, driven by a perfect storm of factors impacting the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace. With anticipated increases exceeding 60% in some states and the potential expiration of federal premium subsidies, many employees could face out-of-pocket costs soaring by up to 75%, compounding the financial pressure. The ongoing upward trend in medical costs, coupled with employers' shifts in cost-sharing strategies, may further challenge employees as they navigate rising healthcare expenses. Planning ahead and understanding these dynamics is crucial for effective budgeting and healthcare management in the coming years. Click here to learn more
What Are Estate Planning Concerns of Unmarried Couples?
In General
For any of our clients from ConocoPhillips who are unmarried, it's important that you understand the laws regarding your estate and what happens to it after you die. Estates must deal with two major areas of the law: probate law, which governs the distribution of your property after your death, and gift and estate tax laws, which govern the taxation of the property you transfer to others. As a partner in an unmarried couple at ConocoPhillips, you have reason to be concerned with both of these areas. Laws that protect and favor married couples don't apply to you.
Without proper protection, your surviving partner could be ordered out of a house you share, your next of kin could dispose of your estate in a way in which you would not approve, or taxes could take a big bite out of the bequest you leave to your partner. We'd also like these ConocoPhillips employees to keep in mind that your partner could be left out of financial and medical decision-making if you become seriously ill or incapacitated. Don't take anything for granted. Get your estate plan in order. You owe it to yourself and your partner to ensure that your estate is handled according to your wishes.
Caution: State laws vary widely, and some of the following estate planning issues may not apply to your situation. It's very important for ConocoPhillips employees to discuss their estate plans with an attorney who is experienced with state and federal laws that affect unmarried couples.
Probate Concerns
Your partner has no automatic legal right to inherit your estate. This being said, ConocoPhillips employees need to keep in mind that unless they set up a will or will substitute to provide for their partner, their estate will go to their next of kin.
Gift And Estate Tax Concerns
Because you cannot take advantage of the unlimited marital deduction, your estate may be heavily taxed on any amount you leave to your partner. The property you hold as joint tenants with rights of survivorship will not necessarily escape estate taxation. Gifts you make to your partner during life may also be taxable.
Illness And Incapacity Concerns
Without a durable power of attorney for health care (DPAHC), medical professionals and/or your partner's family may exclude you from medical decision-making or even visiting with your partner if he or she becomes seriously ill or incapacitated. Without a durable power of attorney for finances, you have no authority to manage your partner's financial affairs as he or she would wish.
The Different Roles of Probate Law And Estate Tax Law
Probate laws govern the distribution of your estate, whereas gift and estate tax laws govern the taxation of your estate. Although these areas of the law often overlap, they each play a distinct role in the estate planning process. The assets included in your estate for purposes of probate law may differ from what's included for purposes of gift and estate tax. The probate court generally reaches fewer assets than the gift and estate tax laws.
Four Ways To Transfer Your Estate To Your Partner
There are four ways these ConocoPhillips employees can transfer your estate to their surviving partner:
- Automatically, by owning property in joint tenancy with the right of survivorship (JTWROS); this can apply to any property with a title, such as real estate, vehicles, bank accounts, stocks, bonds, and mutual funds
- By designating your partner as the beneficiary of your life insurance policy and/or retirement account
- Through the provisions of a living trust
- Through the probate laws of your state
Any property transferred through a JTWROS, a beneficiary designation, or a trust will not pass through probate. The probate court handles estates governed by a will, as well as those without a will that transfer assets according to the intestacy laws of your state.
Probate Concerns
We'd like to remind these ConocoPhillips employees that as a partner in an unmarried couple, your partner has no legal right to inherit your estate. Unless you set up a will or will substitute to provide for your partner, your estate will go to your next of kin through the probate process. There are several reasons you may want to avoid probate. Remember that probate courts handle estates governed by wills as well as those without wills. If you transfer your estate to your partner in a will, certain disapproving relatives or certain other parties can contest it. If you die without a will, your estate automatically passes to your next of kin according to the intestacy laws of your state, which will leave your unmarried partner without a share of your assets. For ConocoPhillips employees who are concerned about the court having jurisdiction over the distribution of their assets, you might want to keep as much of your estate as possible out of probate. Another reason to keep your estate out of probate is that probate proceedings are a matter of public record, open to anyone who inquires about them.
Avoiding Probate
You can use the following approaches to keep as much of your estate as possible out of probate:
- JTWROS
- Beneficiary designations on life insurance and retirement accounts
- Living trusts
For Assets That Cannot Avoid Probate
Use a Will
You can use a will to transfer any assets that you cannot transfer through the probate-avoiding approaches mentioned above. Although probate courts generally respect the wishes outlined in a properly executed will, the threat of a will challenge from a hostile or disapproving family member can cause a lot of anxiety for your loved ones, since your estate is already in court when it enters probate.
Reduce The Risk of a Will Challenge
A successful will challenge is hard to mount. Someone contesting your will must prove that it was executed incorrectly, that you were unduly influenced or not of sound mind when you made it, or that it was the result of fraud. However, for ConocoPhillips employees who are seriously concerned about a will challenge, you can take the following steps to reduce the risk:
- Pass as much of your estate through these probate-avoiding mechanisms: JTWROS, beneficiary designations, and living trusts.
- Mention every member of your family in your will. If you're disinheriting someone, you may want to state a sensible reason why (but do not slander someone in your will). (A will challenge is most likely to come from a disinherited family member.)
- Add a 'no contest' provision to your will. This means that anyone who contests your will gets nothing at all.
- If you have a debilitating disease, prepare your will early to ensure that there's no question that you're of 'sound mind and body.'
- Make sure that your will is executed properly. If your surviving partner is the beneficiary of the bulk of your estate, he or she should not be present when you execute the will. This helps minimize the chance that a disgruntled family member will later have grounds to claim undue influence.
- Share your plans with your family in advance. Communication now can prevent problems in the future when you're no longer here to explain your wishes for the disposition of your estate. Try to find at least one member in whom you can confide and who'll verify your wishes if your will is contested.
Gift And Estate Tax Concerns
The Estate You Leave to Your Partner May Be Subject to Estate Taxes
Everyone is entitled to leave an estate worth up to a certain amount free from federal gift and estate tax (and probably a state death tax, as well). This is called the applicable exclusion amount. Your estate will be taxed on any amount you leave more than the applicable exclusion amount to any individual other than your spouse or charity. Married couples, however, enjoy a special tax break called the unlimited marital deduction, which allows them to transfer as much as they want to a surviving spouse while deferring estate taxes until the surviving spouse's death.
Property You Hold Through JTWROS May Be Subject to Estate Taxes
Although it avoids probate, the property you own through a JTWROS does not automatically escape estate taxation. The entire value of the property you and your partner as an unmarried couple own through a JTWROS is included in the gross taxable estate of the first to die unless your estate can prove your surviving partner contributed to the cost of the property.
Tip: It's important for these ConocoPhillips employees to keep accurate records of their individual contributions to property held as JTWROS to document their separate shares of the ownership.
Property You Hold As Tenants In Common May Be Subject to Gift And Estate Taxes
The property you hold as tenants in common is subject to probate. It does not automatically pass to your partner, as does property owned as JTWROS. It is transferred according to your will or, if you die without a will, to your next of kin according to the intestacy laws of your state.
If you add your partner's name to a title as a tenant in common without a fair exchange of value, this may be considered a gift subject to federal gift and estate tax (and perhaps state gift tax as well). You may be able to exclude gifts to your partner each year of amounts up to the annual gift tax exclusion amount if they qualify. Gift tax owed, however, may be offset by your lifetime gift and estate tax applicable exclusion amount if it is available.
Caution: Any portion of your applicable exclusion amount you use for lifetime gifts effectively reduces the amount that will be available at your death.
Assets You Transfer to Your Partner While Living May Be Subject to Gift Taxes
Any assets you transfer to your partner while living without a fair exchange of value may be considered a gift subject to federal gift and estate tax (and perhaps state gift tax as well). You are entitled to transfer annual gift tax exclusion gifts to each individual you wish, provided the transfer is a present interest gift (something the beneficiary receives immediately). Ordinarily, you may think of a gift as something you give expecting nothing in return.
For purposes of the federal gift and estate tax, however, gifts include uneven exchanges of property. A ConocoPhillips married couple, however, can transfer any amount of assets to each other free of tax due to the unlimited marital deduction. Even if you simply add your partner's name to a deed, if there is not an exchange of fair value, this may constitute a gift subject to tax on the amount the value of the gift exceeds the annual gift tax exclusion.
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Caution: A potentially big source of problems for unmarried couples is transfer taxes that arise from commingled assets, such as real estate, automobiles, and joint bank and investment accounts. These ConocoPhillips employees should keep accurate records to prove what share of the property they each own.
The State May Tax Assets You Leave Your Partner At Higher Rates Than Assets You Leave to Family Members
We'd like ConocoPhillips employees to keep in mind that almost every state imposes some form of death tax. Although the state rate may be lower than the federal rate, state taxes may apply to a larger portion, perhaps all, of your estate. State taxation laws vary widely and are beyond the scope of this discussion. However, the important point for these ConocoPhillips employees to know is that bequests you make to your unmarried partner may be taxed at higher so-called collateral rates. In most states, transfers of assets between spouses and other relatives are either fully or partially exempt from tax or taxed at the lower linear rates.
Avoiding Federal Gift and Estate Tax
Make Tax-Free Gifts
ConocoPhillips employees can reduce the amount of tax their estate will owe by making tax-free gifts to others during their lifetime, thereby reducing the size of their taxable estate.
- Making tax-free gifts to your partner--If your estate exceeds the applicable exclusion amount and the value of your partner's estate is less than that, you can equalize your estates by making gifts to your partner that qualify for the annual gift tax exclusion. This reduces the size of your taxable estate and does not result in any tax on your partner's estate as long as the gifts don't cause your partner's estate to exceed the applicable exclusion amount.
- Making tax-free gifts to others--You can further reduce the size of your estate by giving as many tax-free annual exclusion gifts during your lifetime as you can to those you might otherwise plan on remembering in your will. If you give more than the annual gift tax exclusion amount to any one person, the amount that exceeds the exclusion will be applied against your applicable exclusion amount, if available.
Tip: These ConocoPhillips employees should keep in mind that the annual exclusion applies only to gifts of a present interest in the property, which means that the beneficiary must presently have the right to possess and enjoy the gift. For example, a gift of cash is a present interest, but a gift of the right to receive your house when you die is not.
Give Life Insurance
The proceeds of a life insurance policy are generally included in your estate for transfer tax purposes. ConocoPhillips employees can transfer ownership of their policy to their partner or any other person to keep the policy out of their estate. The new owner then becomes responsible for paying the premiums though you may pay premiums as additional gifts. Once you transfer all incidents of ownership over your policy, assuming neither your estate nor your executor is beneficiaries, the value of the policy stays out of your estate as long as the transaction occurs three years before you die. However, if you die within three years of transferring ownership of the policy, the proceeds from the policy are includable in your estate for transfer tax purposes.
Think carefully before transferring ownership of your policy. The gift of a life insurance policy is irrevocable. The new owner can change any beneficiaries you've named, borrow against the policy, change the payment options, or even surrender or cancel the policy. If you give the policy to your partner and your relationship later ends, you cannot get the policy back.
Cross-Own Life Insurance
With this method, you each buy a policy on the life of the other. Because your partner doesn't own the policy on his own life, the proceeds from that policy are not includable in his or her estate. You may need to demonstrate an insurable interest to purchase life insurance on each other. ConocoPhillips married couples are assumed to have an insurable interest. Couples who own a house or business together are also considered to have an insurable interest, although only up to the value of their shares of the mortgage or business. You can prove insurable interest by providing evidence of jointly owned assets and, possibly, copies of your wills or trust documents.
Create an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT)
With this method, you establish a trust managed by a trustee that buys and owns a life insurance policy. You provide the trust with the funds to pay the premiums.
Tip: Because the trust owns the policy, the proceeds are kept out of your estate.
Caution: ConocoPhillips employees can transfer an existing policy into the plan, but if you die within three years, the value of the policy will be included in your estate. An irrevocable trust must be set up carefully to avoid adverse tax consequences. It can be costly to set up, and, as its name implies, once it is established, it generally cannot be revoked.
Set Up Irrevocable Living Trusts
Here, you establish an irrevocable living trust that allows you to transfer property directly to your beneficiaries. By irrevocably relinquishing your control, you give up your ownership rights, thus keeping the assets in the trust out of your estate.
Caution: These ConocoPhillips employees should keep in mind that once you transfer assets into an irrevocable trust, you lose control over them. If you need them in the future, you can't get them back. Transferring assets to an irrevocable trust may trigger gift tax liabilities.
If You Can't Avoid Federal Gift and Estate Tax, Life Insurance Can Provide Cash to Replace It
Cross-Owning Life Insurance Policies
You can each cross-own a policy on the life of the other to replace the estate value lost due to the transfer taxes. Because this policy is not your partner's property, it's not includable in his or her estate for transfer tax purposes. The life insurance policy proceeds can be used to pay the transfer taxes.
Planning for Illness and Incapacity
Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care (DPAHC)
It's also important that these ConocoPhillips employees take the time now to plan for possible illness or incapacity. If you are seriously ill or injured and can't express your wishes or make your own medical decisions, whom would you want to represent you? Medical personnel often look to immediate family members for authority to act. Your unmarried partner may be forced to stand on the sidelines while medical decisions are made. He or she may even be barred from visiting you if you're in intensive care. If you want your partner to represent you in case of serious illness or incapacity, you should prepare a DPAHC (also called a healthcare proxy). You may also want a living will to make your wishes clear.
Durable Power of Attorney for Finances
If you become incapacitated or incompetent, who will manage your financial affairs? Will your affairs be handled as you would wish? You can designate your partner as your representative with a durable power of attorney. This authorizes your partner to deal with banks, insurance companies, and investment brokers on your behalf. It gives your partner access to your bank and investment accounts.
Tip: These ConocoPhillips employees should be aware of possible federal gift and estate tax consequences if you authorize your unmarried partner to act as your power of attorney for finances. Unless the power of attorney is drafted properly, the IRS could consider some transactions as gifts. In order to prevent this, your partner should be prohibited from using the power of attorney to benefit himself or herself and his or her creditors.
Support Your Estate Plans With a Domestic Partner Agreement
A domestic partnership agreement can support your estate planning documents, whether they are JTWROS property titles, beneficiary designations, trusts, or a will. By referencing these documents and restating your intentions for the distribution of your estate, you clarify your wishes in case they're questioned.
How does the retirement process at ConocoPhillips provide guidance to employees in selecting the most beneficial form of payment? In what ways can employees utilize available resources to maximize their understanding of the pension options offered by ConocoPhillips?
The retirement process at ConocoPhillips provides employees with various resources to guide them in selecting the most beneficial form of pension payment. Employees can access the "How to Choose the Best Form of Payment" link on Your Benefits Resources™ (YBR) to learn more about their options and determine what works best for their financial situation(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
What steps must be completed by employees at ConocoPhillips to ensure they initiate their retirement process accurately and avoid any delays? How crucial is the timing of these steps in determining the Benefit Commencement Date (BCD)?
Employees at ConocoPhillips must initiate the retirement process by requesting their pension paperwork 60-90 days before their Benefit Commencement Date (BCD). Timing is crucial, as missing deadlines may delay the BCD and associated payments. Completing all steps on time ensures that the retirement process flows smoothly(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
Given the complexities associated with the lump-sum pension payment option at ConocoPhillips, what considerations should employees take into account before electing this choice? How does the current interest rate at the Benefit Commencement Date impact the lump-sum amount?
Before electing a lump-sum pension payment, ConocoPhillips employees should consider the current interest rate at their BCD, as it directly affects the lump-sum amount. A higher interest rate typically reduces the lump-sum payment, making timing and rate awareness critical(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
In what ways can ConocoPhillips employees ensure their Pension Election Authorization form is completed correctly to facilitate timely pension payments? What are the implications of not adhering to the required notarized consent for married participants?
Ensuring the correct completion of the Pension Election Authorization form is vital for timely pension payments. For married participants, notarized spousal consent is required, and failure to provide this could result in delays or issues with payment processing(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
How does choosing direct deposit for pension payments at ConocoPhillips streamline the retirement process for employees? What should employees know about setup and changes regarding direct deposit after initiating their pension benefits?
Choosing direct deposit for pension payments simplifies the process for employees at ConocoPhillips, as it enables automatic payments to their bank account. Employees can set up direct deposit during their retirement process or update it at a later time(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
For employees considering rolling over their lump-sum pension payment from ConocoPhillips, what procedures should they follow to ensure compliance with IRS regulations and to avoid tax penalties? How can effective planning influence the success of this rollover?
Employees electing to roll over their lump-sum pension payment must follow specific IRS regulations to avoid tax penalties. Effective planning, such as obtaining rollover paperwork and adhering to IRS rules, ensures compliance and smooth fund transfer(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
What resources does ConocoPhillips provide for employees to calculate and project their retirement income? How can these tools empower employees to make informed decisions regarding their future financial security?
ConocoPhillips provides employees with tools such as the "Project Retirement Income" feature on YBR, empowering them to calculate and project their retirement income. These resources help employees make informed decisions about their financial future(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
How do deadlines play a pivotal role in the benefits process for retiring employees at ConocoPhillips, and what specific dates must be adhered to in order to avoid payment delays? Can you provide examples of consequences resulting from missed deadlines?
Deadlines are critical in ConocoPhillips' retirement process, as missing them can delay pension payments. For example, requesting pension paperwork after the 15th of the month can delay the BCD by a month, affecting the pension payout date(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
What are the added advantages for employees at ConocoPhillips who actively seek assistance or information from the Benefits Center during their retirement planning? How can this proactive approach enhance their overall retirement experience?
Employees who seek assistance from the Benefits Center during their retirement planning benefit from personalized guidance. This proactive approach ensures that they fully understand their options and deadlines, enhancing their overall retirement experience(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).
How can employees at ConocoPhillips contact the Benefits Center to receive personalized assistance in navigating their retirement options? What specific resources and support can they expect when reaching out for help?
ConocoPhillips employees can contact the Benefits Center by calling 800-622-5501 or accessing YBR online. The Benefits Center provides personalized assistance and guidance, helping employees navigate their pension options effectively(ConocoPhillips_Your_Ret…).