COMMON TYPES OF LIFE INSURANCE
To help you understand life insurance, we have provided
a brief, general description of some commonly available types of
life insurance. Note that policy terms may vary from company to
company, from state to state, and from policy form to policy form,
even between forms of the same company. Always consult your policy
for the exact terms of your coverage.
Term
Life Insurance
Term life policies pay only a death
benefit and build no cash values. The coverage lasts only as long
as the policy stipulates (e.g., 5, 10, 15, or 20 years).
Permanent
Life Insurance
This type of life insurance lasts for
the entire life of the insured - as long as premium obligations
are met. The policyowner may pay premiums as long as the insured
lives, or only for a set amount of time. Permanent life policies
usually build cash values in addition to providing a death benefit.
Whole
Life Insurance/Ordinary Life Insurance
This is permanent life insurance that
usually requires premiums to be paid for the entire time the insured
is living.
Universal
Life Insurance
This is a permanent life insurance
policy that may have flexible premiums, cash values and adjustable
death benefits.
Let’s take a more detailed look at
these different types of insurance.
Term Insurance
Term Life Insurance is much simpler
to understand than permanent life insurance. It is designed to provide
life insurance coverage for a limited period of time. Coverage might
be for one year, five years, 10 years or longer, but the face amount
of the policy is payable only if the insured dies during the "term"
specified in the policy. If the insured lives beyond the term of
the policy, the insurance company has fulfilled its part of the
contract and no benefit is paid.
There is no cash value accumulation
in most term policies. When the term ends, the coverage ends and
the insurance company keeps all the money it received in premium
payments. In addition, should the policyowner stop paying premiums
on a term policy before the term ends, the coverage ends and the
insurance company likewise gets to keep the premium payments without
having to return them.
Why Do People Buy Term Insurance?
Sometimes people buy Term Insurance
to cover a short-term need, such as a home mortgage. But usually
it's because they can buy more coverage at a lower premium, especially
at younger ages. As people grow older, they tend not to purchase
or renew term life insurance policies because the premium rates
become very expensive.
Level Term
The "Level" in Level term
insurance refers to both the death benefit and the premium in most
common term policies. With a level term policy, the amount of insurance
protection remains constant for the entire period stipulated in
the policy. The premiums for a level term policy may also remain
the same for the length of the policy.
Level term insurance is simple and
straightforward. The insured wants a death benefit amount that may
be too expensive if provided by permanent insurance. Or the insured
may need the coverage only for a certain period of time and is not
interested in permanent insurance.
Decreasing Term
Decreasing Term Insurance provides
a decreasing amount of coverage during the term of the policy. The
policy's death benefit begins at a certain amount and then gradually
decreases over time according to a formula that is included in the
policy.
There are several reasons for desiring
Decreasing Term Insurance. The most common is providing coverage
while paying off a mortgage or other installment debt. As the debt
is being paid off and the amount outstanding becomes less, the coverage
provided by the decreasing term policy is likewise reduced.
Credit Life
There may be other debts that are significant
and that are paid for on an installment basis - an automobile, new
furniture or large balances on credit cards. All of these would
have to be paid by an individual's estate if he or she should die
before they were fully paid off. Credit Life Insurance is designed
to meet these obligations.
Credit Life Insurance consists of Decreasing
Term Insurance that matches the full amount of the debt at the onset,
then gradually diminishes at the same rate that the debt is paid
off. Once the debt is discharged, coverage ends.
Increasing Term
To combat inflation or to meet additional
responsibilities in the future, Increasing Term Insurance provides
a death benefit that begins at one amount and then increases at
stated intervals over the policy term. Premiums will also increase
due to higher death benefits and attained age (the age of the insured
at the time of renewal).
FEATURES OF TERM INSURANCE
Renewability
Term Life Insurance policies may include
a renewability provision that allows the policyowner to renew coverage
at the end of the term for the same coverage or less without having
to prove insurability. There are, however, conditions attached to
renewability.
First, when a term life policy is renewed,
the premium increases. This is in contrast to a level term policy
in which the premium remains the same as long as the coverage is
in effect. When renewed, however, the premium is based on the attained
age of the insured. Each time the policy is renewed, the insured
is older, the mortality risk is greater and therefore, the coverage
is more costly.
Convertibility
Term Life Insurance policies may also
contain a convertibility provision that allows the policyowner to
convert to permanent coverage without having to prove insurability.
Not all term life policies offer this provision, and those that
do may charge an extra premium for the right to convert to permanent
coverage. In addition, to prevent adverse selection, most insurance
companies usually limit the conversion privilege by one of these
methods:
Prohibiting conversion after the insured
has reached a specified age (e.g., age 70)
Prohibiting conversion after the
term policy has been in force a certain number of years (e.g.,
seven years in a 10-year term policy)
Should the conversion option be exercised,
a new policy of permanent insurance is issued. The premium for this
new policy will be higher than that for the original term insurance
because permanent insurance builds cash values and the attained
age is higher than when the policy was issued.
Convertible and renewable provisions
are not automatically a part of every term policy issued. They must
be specifically included in the policy that is purchased.
Permanent
Life Insurance
Permanent life policies last for the
entire life of the insured - as long as premiums are paid when due.
Premiums paid to the insurance company
for a permanent life policy can be viewed as split into two parts:
One part goes to the insurance
company to pay for the insurance protection the policy provides.
Insurance protection can be simply defined as the risk the insurance
company takes that it will have to pay the face amount or death
benefit of the policy. The longer the insured lives, the less
risk the insurance company takes.
The other part of the premiums
paid for a permanent policy goes toward the cash value buildup.
This is money that is invested by the insurance company to increase
the policy's cash value over the years. This cash value can
become available during the life of the insured in the form
of withdrawals or loans.
Whole
Life Insurance
Whole Life Insurance gets its name
because it usually requires premiums to be paid on the policy for
the rest of the insured's life. Premiums remain the same while the
policy is in force, which is until the insured dies (or reaches
age 100). When the insured dies, the policy pays the face amount
or death benefit to the beneficiary. As long as the insured lives,
however, and continues to pay the premiums, the cash value in the
policy accumulates year by year.
Limited Pay Policies
Many people want the lifetime insurance
coverage offered by a whole life policy, but do not want to pay
premiums for the rest of their lives. A limited pay policy is whole
life insurance that requires premiums only for a specified number
of years or to a specified age of the insured.
Coverage, however, remains in force
for the insured's lifetime.
Limited pay policies are sometimes
referred to as 10-pay, 15-pay or 20-pay life depending upon the
number of years premiums are to be paid. The premiums for limited
pay policies are higher than those for a whole life policy because
they are squeezed into a shorter time period
Because the premiums are higher, the
cash values of limited pay policies usually build at a faster rate
than for whole life policies.
The limited pay policy offers advantages
to both the insurance company and to the policyowner:
The insurance company benefits
because the premiums provide more money sooner to be used for
investment.
The benefits to the policyowner
are that the limited pay policy accumulates cash values at a
faster rate than does the whole life policy. A limited pay policy
also provides a lifetime of insurance coverage that may be paid
during the earning years, allowing for no further premium payments
at retirement.
Single-Premium Whole Life (SPWL)
A limited pay life policy that can
be paid for with only one premium is called a single premium policy.
The premium for such a policy might be thousands of dollars. The
advantage to the insurance company of a single premium policy is
that the company saves expenses in the collection of premiums and
also has the entire purchase price of the policy available to invest
right away.
Juvenile Insurance
Juvenile insurance is life insurance
written on the life of a child. It is a means of building an insurance
program for a child with low premiums and usually at standard rates.
It helps protect a child's insurability
if the child should become uninsurable before reaching adulthood.
And it can be used to build cash or loan values to help pay for
a college education.
Juvenile insurance can be any type
of ordinary coverage, for example, whole life, limited pay life,
universal life, convertible term, graded premium whole life, or
modified whole life.
Universal
Life
Universal Life Insurance is a Permanent
Life Insurance policy, but may have flexible premiums, cash values,
and adjustable death benefits.
A major feature of universal life policies
is premium flexibility. The key to this flexibility is the policy's
cash value. As the policy acquires a cash value, the amount and
the timing of premium payments may be adjusted. So long as there
is sufficient cash value in the policy from which to deduct the
monthly cost of insurance protection provided by the insurance company,
the policy remains in force - even if premium payments are skipped
altogether.
Premiums for a universal life policy
go into a cash value (accumulation) "account." Deducted
from this account, usually on a monthly basis, is the amount needed
to pay for the insurance protection supporting the policy's death
benefit. When premiums are paid in amounts exceeding the cost of
the insurance protection, the cash value accumulates in this account.
Two adjustments are made to the cash
value account of a universal life policy, usually on a monthly basis:
The first is a credit to the account
of interest earned. (The policy has a guaranteed minimum interest
rate that lasts as long as the policy is in force. This is the
least amount of interest that will be earned by the cash value
account. If the current level of interest is higher than the
guaranteed rate this usually results in an even faster buildup
of the policy's cash value account.)
The second is a charge against
the account for the cost of the insurance protection and all
expense charges.
Death Benefit Options Of Universal
Life
There are two death benefit options
in a universal life insurance policy:
The first option provides a level
death benefit that can remain the same throughout most of the
time the policy is in force. (However, the policyowner may be
able to increase the death benefit without purchasing a new
policy, but proof of insurability may be required. The policyowner
may also be able to decrease the death benefit.) With all permanent
life policies, the death benefit is made up of a combination
of insurance protection (the amount the insurance company has
at risk) and the policy's cash value. Because the policyowner
may be able to adjust the amount of the premium payment, putting
in too much premium may bring the policy's cash value close
to or equal to the policy's death benefit. Under the definition
of life insurance that is written into federal tax law, that
cannot happen until the insured is at least age 95. There must
always be at least some amount at risk in a universal life policy
until the insured turns 95. If there isn't, it ceases to be
considered life insurance.
The second option provides an increasing
death benefit that is made up of the face amount of the policy
plus the policy's cash value. With this option the policyowner
is purchasing more insurance protection under an increasing
death benefit option, than under a level death benefit option.
VARIABLE LIFE
Variable Life Insurance is a securities-based
whole life insurance product. That means the policy's cash value
is invested in specified securities portfolios and allocated according
to the policyowner's choosing. To sell variable life insurance,
an agent needs not only a valid life insurance license, but must
also be registered with the National Association of Securities Dealers
(NASD). This registration may be obtained by taking and passing
one or more NASD exams.
VARIABLE UNIVERSAL LIFE
Variable universal life incorporates
the flexibility of universal life and the investment features of
variable life. Like universal life, it offers flexible premium payments,
an adjustable death benefit and may offer either a level or an increasing
death benefit option. And like variable life, agents who sell variable
universal life insurance must be both life licensed and NASD registered.