Royal London has extended its online, signature-free, trust into its Whole of Life (WOL) application journey.
Extending its signature-free trusts process to enable a plan to be placed in trust as part of the online application journey, aims to make the process easier, more efficient, and means advisers can complete the process in one go.
Selecting the right trust for clients can now be completed online for WOL, business, relevant life plans and personal menu plans, removing the need for an electronic or wet signature from clients, trustees, or witnesses.
New discretionary trust form
As well as the extension of online trusts, Royal London has launched a new discretionary trust form that aims to make it easier to administer and claim on.
This new form replaces four existing discretionary trusts, combining them into one.
This means the same form, whether online or paper, can be used for both joint and single life cases, with or without critical illness. The online journey doesn’t require signatures from customers, trustees or witnesses.
New features to improve customer outcomes and prevent foreseeable harm have been added. The most significant, and an industry first, is the addition of cohabitees as beneficiaries.
Trustee administration at claim has also been reduced by including payment direct to beneficiaries as a more prominent option, avoiding the need for trustees to register the trust if the claim is not for death, as well as speeding up payment to the bereaved.
Jennifer Gilchrist, protection expert at Royal London, (pictured) said: “Trust and beneficiary nomination developments are high on our agenda for digital enablement of advisers for new and existing customers.
“Having both solutions will help deliver the best outcomes for clients and their loved ones, especially when it comes to claims.
“This is particularly relevant to cohabitees, the fastest growing family unit in the UK*, who can be excluded from death benefits without the right planning in place.
“Including this group provides one of the broadest selection of beneficiaries in the market.”
Ruth Gilbert, partner at Insuring Change, added: “Trusts and contractual beneficiary nomination are complementary solutions to the problems which life cover claimants can face if the direction of death benefits has been left to chance.
“It’s great to see Royal London put trusts on an equal footing to beneficiary nomination for ensuring cohabiting partners are not excluded.”