Asset Protection for Physicians 2026: Umbrella Insurance, Entity Structuring, and What Actually Works
What you'll learn
- The malpractice exposure reality (it's not what TV suggests)
- Umbrella insurance: what it does, what it doesn't, how to size it
- Retirement accounts: ERISA vs. IRA creditor protection
- State homestead exemptions: huge variance
- Titling assets and joint ownership
- LLCs for rental real estate (yes) — for a clinical practice (different question)
- Irrevocable trusts: usually overkill
- Myths physicians fall for (offshore, "secret" structures)
- FAQ
The malpractice exposure reality
Asset protection conversations for physicians almost always start with malpractice anxiety, and it's worth grounding that anxiety in what actually tends to happen. Most claims that reach payout are resolved within the limits of the physician's malpractice policy, which is exactly what the policy is there to do. The cases that haunt physicians — a verdict above policy limits, a personal asset judgment — exist, but they are statistically rare and concentrated in a small number of specialties and jurisdictions. The implication is not that you can ignore exposure; it is that the bulk of your protection comes from carrying adequate malpractice limits in the first place, not from exotic structures bolted on afterward.
Beyond malpractice, physicians also face the same liability exposure as any high-income household: auto accidents, dog bites, a contractor falling off the roof, a teenage driver in the family. These non-clinical risks are quietly responsible for a meaningful share of large personal judgments, and they are the easiest exposure to address. For a broader physician-finance perspective on this layering approach, the White Coat Investor asset protection hub and the threads on Bogleheads are widely cited third-party references in the physician community. We are not affiliated with either; they are educational resources.
Umbrella insurance: what it does, what it doesn't, how to size it
An umbrella policy is a personal liability policy that sits on top of the liability limits in your auto and homeowners (or renters) policies. When a covered claim exhausts the underlying policy limits, the umbrella picks up from there, up to its own limit. It is one of the highest-leverage purchases on a physician's balance sheet: a $1M–$2M umbrella often costs a few hundred dollars a year.
What an umbrella policy generally does cover, subject to the policy language: bodily injury and property damage you are legally liable for, beyond underlying auto and homeowners limits; certain personal injury claims like libel and slander; legal defense costs in covered claims. What it generally does not cover: professional malpractice (that is what your malpractice policy is for); intentional wrongdoing; business activities; and, in many policies, claims arising from a rental property unless specifically endorsed. Always read the policy and confirm exclusions with a licensed broker.
On sizing, the rule of thumb most often cited in physician-finance writing is to carry umbrella coverage at least equal to your net worth, and to increase it in $1M increments as net worth grows — commonly to $2M, then $3M, then $5M for higher-net-worth attendings. Many insurers cap personal umbrella coverage at $5M, above which a separate excess policy or a higher-net-worth carrier is required. Two practical checks before buying:
- Underlying limits matter. Most umbrella insurers require minimum auto bodily injury and homeowners liability limits before they will write the umbrella. Raising those underlying limits is often the cheapest way to unlock the umbrella in the first place.
- Household drivers matter. A teenage driver, a household member with a recent at-fault accident, or a high-performance vehicle can drive premium significantly. The umbrella underwriter will ask.
Retirement accounts: ERISA vs. IRA creditor protection
One of the quietest pieces of physician asset protection is already sitting on your benefits portal: your employer-sponsored retirement plan. Most 401(k) and similar plans offered by U.S. employers are governed by ERISA (the Employee Retirement Income Security Act), and ERISA generally provides strong federal protection against creditors. In practical terms, money inside a properly structured ERISA plan is hard for a general creditor to reach, both in bankruptcy and outside it. This protection is one of the reasons physician-finance writers routinely tell early attendings to max the employer plan before doing almost anything else, beyond the obvious benefits of tax-deferred growth and employer match.
IRAs are a different story. In federal bankruptcy, traditional and Roth IRAs are protected up to a periodically inflation-adjusted cap (over $1.5M as of recent updates — confirm the current number), and amounts rolled over from a qualified plan generally retain ERISA-style protection in bankruptcy without that cap. Outside bankruptcy — for example, a personal civil judgment — IRA creditor protection depends on the law of the state where the physician lives. Some states protect IRAs essentially fully; others protect only the portion deemed necessary for support; a handful provide limited protection. If you have a large IRA (especially one rolled over from a former 401(k)), this state-by-state variance is one of the most important conversations to have with a local asset protection attorney before you assume your IRA is "safe."
The practical takeaway: when in doubt, leaving money in a current employer's ERISA plan can be more protective than rolling it to an IRA, depending on your state. That is a conversation worth having before any rollover.
State homestead exemptions: huge variance
The homestead exemption is a state-law rule that shields some or all of the equity in a primary residence from certain creditors. The variance is enormous. A handful of states — Florida and Texas are the most-discussed examples — provide unusually broad homestead protection, with no dollar cap in many circumstances (though acreage and other limits apply). Other states cap the exemption at a modest five-figure number, which for most physicians' home equity is essentially symbolic. A few states provide essentially no homestead protection outside of bankruptcy.
What this means for a physician deciding where to put marginal dollars: in a strong-homestead state, paying down a mortgage on a primary residence can be a more powerful asset protection move than in a weak-homestead state, where the same dollars in a 401(k) or properly structured account would be better protected. This is a state-specific calculation and well outside the kind of generic advice an article can give. It is a textbook example of a question worth taking to a fee-only fiduciary and a local attorney before reorganizing your balance sheet.
Titling assets and joint ownership
How you title an asset matters for creditor exposure. Three patterns recur in the physician-finance literature:
- Tenancy by the entirety. In states that recognize it, real estate owned by a married couple as tenants by the entirety is generally protected from the creditors of either spouse alone — only a joint creditor can reach it. This can be a meaningful protection for a physician's primary residence in the right state.
- Spousal-titled accounts. Putting a non-clinician spouse's name on certain assets can change exposure profile, but it also changes what happens in a divorce. The trade-off is real and not always worth it. Decisions here belong with an attorney, not the internet.
- Beneficiary designations. Life insurance and retirement accounts pass by beneficiary designation regardless of the will. Stale beneficiaries (ex-spouse, deceased relative) are one of the most common silent estate-planning failures. Review them annually.
LLCs for rental real estate — and the practice question
For rental real estate, putting each property (or a small group of properties) in its own LLC is a defensible, well-understood structure. The LLC isolates the property's liability from your personal balance sheet: if a tenant slips on the stairs, the claim is generally against the LLC and its property, not against your home or your bank accounts, provided you maintained the entity properly (separate accounts, proper documentation, no commingling). For physicians moving into real estate syndications or buying their own rentals, this is standard practice.
For the clinical practice itself, the analysis is more nuanced. A professional LLC or professional corporation (PLLC/PC) is the entity many physicians use when they own their practice, and it can isolate non-clinical business liability — a slip-and-fall in the waiting room — from a physician's personal assets. What an LLC or PC cannot do is shield an individual physician from personal liability for their own clinical acts; courts will reach through the entity to the doctor who provided the care. That is what malpractice insurance is for. The entity is a complement, not a replacement.
Irrevocable trusts: usually overkill for a first asset protection plan
Irrevocable trusts — including domestic asset protection trusts (DAPTs) recognized in a growing list of states — come up often in physician asset protection conversations. They are legitimate tools in the right hands. They are also expensive to set up and maintain, generally require giving up some degree of control over the assets, have meaningful tax-planning implications, and have an uneven track record when stress-tested in court, particularly across state lines. For most physicians, the cheaper protections — adequate malpractice, a properly sized umbrella, ERISA accounts, homestead in a strong-homestead state, LLCs for rental property — cover the realistic risk profile at a fraction of the cost and complexity. If your net worth and exposure profile genuinely justifies a trust strategy, that is a conversation with a board-certified estate planning or asset protection attorney, not an article.
Myths physicians fall for
A handful of asset protection myths circulate in physician circles. Naming them is half the work:
- "An offshore trust will make me untouchable." Offshore asset protection trusts are aggressively marketed to physicians and are almost never the right first step. They are expensive, carry serious tax-reporting obligations (FBAR, Form 3520), have been pierced by U.S. courts in well-known cases, and can create more attention than they deflect. The physician-finance community broadly treats them as a niche tool for very high-net-worth situations after every cheaper layer is already in place.
- "My LLC will protect me from a malpractice suit." It will not. See above.
- "I'll transfer everything to my spouse if I get sued." Transfers made after a claim is reasonably foreseeable are routinely unwound under fraudulent transfer laws. Asset protection done after the event is generally not asset protection.
- "Umbrella insurance covers malpractice." It does not. Personal umbrellas explicitly exclude professional liability.
- "More layers are always better." Every layer adds cost and complexity. The right plan is the simplest one that addresses your specific exposure given your state, specialty, family situation, and balance sheet.
Putting it together: a sane order of operations
For most physicians, a reasonable order of operations looks roughly like this — talk to an advisor and an attorney before assuming it fits your state and situation:
- Adequate malpractice insurance at appropriate limits for your specialty and state. This is by far the most important layer.
- Maximum sensible auto and homeowners liability limits, then an umbrella policy at least equal to net worth.
- Maximum contributions to ERISA-qualified employer plans; pair with a cash balance plan if you own your practice and the math works.
- Understand your state's homestead and IRA-protection rules before any major rollover or paydown decision.
- Use LLCs for rental real estate; maintain them properly (no commingling).
- Only then consider more advanced trust or entity work — and only with a board-certified attorney.
For the broader physician-finance picture, including how asset protection fits with student-loan strategy, see our PSLF vs refinance framework and the main physician guide.
FAQ
How much umbrella insurance does a physician need?
The most-cited guideline in physician-finance writing is to carry umbrella coverage at least equal to your net worth, stepped up in $1M increments to roughly $5M as net worth grows. Umbrella is a personal liability layer above auto and homeowners — it does not cover malpractice. Premiums are typically modest relative to coverage. Confirm with a licensed broker.
Are my retirement accounts safe from creditors?
ERISA-qualified employer plans like 401(k)s generally have strong federal creditor protection. IRA protection is federal in bankruptcy up to an inflation-adjusted cap and otherwise depends on state law, which varies considerably. For a large IRA — including one rolled over from a former 401(k) — review your state's rules with an asset protection attorney before assuming your IRA is fully protected.
Will an LLC protect me from a malpractice suit?
No. A professional LLC or PC does not shield an individual physician from personal liability for their own clinical acts. That is what malpractice insurance is for. LLCs are useful for isolating non-clinical liability, such as a rental property, from your personal balance sheet.
Should I set up an offshore asset protection trust?
Almost never as a first step. Offshore trusts are expensive, complex, and have an uneven track record in U.S. courts. Adequate insurance, ERISA accounts, homestead in a strong-homestead state, and proper entity structuring cover the realistic risk for the vast majority of physicians.
What is the single most important asset protection step for a physician?
Adequate malpractice insurance at appropriate limits, layered with an umbrella personal liability policy sized to net worth. The bulk of physician asset protection in practice comes from insurance, not exotic structures. Trust and entity work is a complement to insurance, not a substitute.