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WHAT IS CASH VALUE LIFE INSURANCE?
The primary purpose of life insurance is to provide financial
support to your loved ones in the event of your death.
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Every type of life insurance policy
has a regular cost (called a premium) based on your life
expectancy and the type and amount of your insurance coverage.
A term life policy provides insurance
coverage for a specific period of time (term).
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At some point in the future, depending on the particular policy
design, the premiums may begin to increase annually according to
your age. The older you get, the more pricy a term policy can
become, and you never receive a benefit from it, though your
beneficiaries will if you die. If you try to hold onto it into
later years, you might end up paying total premiums greater than the
value of the death benefit.
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A permanent life insurance policy covers you
for life as long as you make your premium payments.
The most traditional form of permanent
life insurance is whole life. Once you are approved for
the policy, the insurance company cannot cancel the policy, and the
cost of your payments will not go up because it "averages"
insurance costs over your lifetime.
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Premiums for whole life policies are initially higher than those
for term, but over the long run can end up lower and sometimes
much lower. There are also variations on the whole life insurance
theme. Relative newcomers to the permanent insurance world include
universal and variable life insurance.
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Universal life insurance allows
flexibility in both the premium and death benefit.
Variable life insurance allows
more control over the investment of the "cash value."
Variable universal life
combines elements of both universal and variable life.
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In this tutorial, we will focus on the elements of cash value life
insurance common to all forms of permanent insurance.
In addition to covering the current risk of the death benefit,
part of the premium you pay for permanent insurance is invested in
the company's general account or separate account, depending on the
type of policy you purchase.
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This portion of your premium makes up
the policy's cash value and increases with additions and
earnings.
A policy's cash value is different
from its face value. Face value is the amount of a policy
paid to your dependents when you die, and the cash value is a
component of this death benefit.
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Cash value is the amount you will get if you surrender (cancel)
your policy before you die. You can borrow this amount at any time
in the form of tax-free loans. You may even make policy loans to
pay your premiums. All components of a whole life policy are
guaranteed—premium, death benefit, and cash value. With universal
and variable life, only the death benefit is guaranteed.
One way to understand how whole life policies work as compared
to term policies is to compare them to buying or renting a house.
Like buying a house, whole life policies provide the benefit of
building up equity, or the cash value. When you rent a house, you get
the benefits of living in the house, but when your lease is up, you
leave with no equity—likewise with a term policy. When you buy a
house, you also build up extra value that is yours when you sell
the house. This is similar to the way a cash value policy
works.
Your insurance company invests the cash value of your policy in
securities. With whole life policies, it is usually invested in
high-grade income securities. With whole life insurance, you
received a fixed return on your cash value. With universal and
variable life, good investment performance can lead to higher cash
values, higher death benefits, and/or lower premiums. Other factors
that can affect performance of your policy are the company's
experience in mortality (death claims) and expenses.
What kinds of things can you use the cash
value of your policy for? Let's find out in the next section of the
tutorial.
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