What is permanent insurance? This is a question that many people ask when they are looking for life insurance. Permanent insurance is a type of life insurance that lasts until you die. It is different from other types of life insurance, such as term life insurance, which only lasts for a certain amount of time. Permanent insurance can be used to provide financial security for your loved ones in the event of your death. It can also be used to pay for your burial expenses and other final expenses. In this blog post, we will discuss what permanent life insurance is. You can then decide if it might be a good option for you!

Pros and cons of life insurance

Keys to It All

Permanent insurance provides lifelong protection, and the ability to accumulate cash value on a tax-deferred basis. Unlike term insurance, a permanent policy will remain in force for as long as you continue to pay your premiums. Because these policies are designed and priced for you to keep over a long period, this may not be the right type of insurance for you if you don’t have a long-term need for life insurance coverage.

Why would someone need coverage for an extended period? Because contrary to what a lot of people think, the need for life insurance often persists long after the kids have graduated college or the mortgage has been paid off. If you died the day after your youngest child graduated from college, your spouse would still be faced with daily living expenses. And what if your spouse outlives you by 10, 20, or even 30 years, which is certainly possible today? Would your financial plan, without life insurance, enable your spouse to maintain the lifestyle you worked so hard to achieve? And would you be able to pass on something to your children or grandchildren?

Cash Value

Another key characteristic of permanent insurance is a feature known as cash value or cash surrender value. Permanent insurance is often referred to as cash-value insurance. This is because these types of policies can build cash value over time. They can also provide a death benefit to your beneficiaries.

Cash values, which accumulate on a tax-deferred basis just like assets in most retirement and tuition savings plans, can be used in the future for any purpose you wish. If you like, you can borrow cash value for a down payment on a home. You can even use to help pay for your children’s education or to provide income for your retirement. When you borrow money from a permanent insurance policy, you’re using the policy’s cash value as collateral and the borrowing rates tend to be relatively low. And unlike loans from most financial institutions, the loan is not dependent on credit checks or other restrictions. You ultimately must repay any loan with interest or your beneficiaries will receive a reduced death benefit and cash surrender value.

If you need to stop paying premiums, you can use the cash value to continue your current insurance protection. This can be for a specified time or to provide a lesser amount of death benefit protection covering you for your lifetime. If you decide to stop paying premiums and surrender your policy, the guaranteed policy values are yours. Just know that if you surrender your policy in the early years, there may be little or no cash value.

Face Amount

With all types of permanent policies, the cash value of a policy is different from the policy’s face amount. The face amount is the money that will be paid at death or policy maturity (most permanent policies typically “mature” around age 100). Cash value is the amount available if you surrender a policy before its maturity or your death. Moreover, the cash value may be affected by your insurance company’s financial results or experience. This can be influenced by mortality rates, expenses, and investment earnings.

“Permanent insurance” is a catchall phrase for a wide variety of life insurance products that contain the cash-value feature. Within this class of life insurance, there is a multitude of different products. Here we list the most common ones.

Whole Life

f you’re the kind of person who likes predictability over time, whole life insurance might be right for you. It provides you with the certainty of a guaranteed amount of death benefit and a guaranteed rate of return on your cash values. And you’ll have a level premium that is guaranteed to never increase for life.

Another valuable benefit of a participating whole life policy is the opportunity to earn dividends. While your policy’s guarantees provide you with a minimum death benefit and cash value, dividends allow you to receive an enhanced death benefit and cash value growth. Dividends are a way for the company to share part of its favorable results with policyholders. When you purchase a participating policy, it is expected that you will receive dividends after the second policy year. Keep in mind – they are not guaranteed. Dividends, if left in the policy, can provide an offset (and more) to the eroding effects of inflation on your coverage amount.

Variable Life

Variable Life insurance is offered via a prospectus and provides death benefits and cash values that vary with the performance of a portfolio of underlying investment options. You can allocate your premiums among a variety of investment options offering different degrees of risk and reward: stocks, bonds, combinations of both, or a fixed account that guarantees interest and principal.

This type of insurance is for people who are willing to assume investment risk to try to achieve greater returns. With Variable Life, you’re shifting much of the investment risk from the insurance company to yourself. Good investment performance would provide the potential for higher cash values and ultimate death benefits. If the specified investments perform poorly, cash values and death benefits would drop accordingly.

Universal Life

Unlike whole life and variable life where you pay fixed premiums, universal life offers adjustable premiums that give you the option to make higher premium payments when you have extra cash on hand or lower ones when money is tight.

Universal life allows you, after your initial payment, to pay premiums at any time, in virtually any amount, subject to certain minimums and maximums. You also can reduce or increase the death benefit more easily than under a traditional whole-life policy.

Most universal life policies will also provide a guaranteed rate of return on your cash values, with one important exception. It is possible that you will not accumulate any cash value if any, or all, of the following circumstances occur: administrative expenses increase, mortality assumptions are changed, the insurance company’s investment portfolio underperforms, and premium payments are insufficient.

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No-Lapse Guarantee

There is also what’s commonly referred to as universal life with secondary guarantees (also known as a “no-lapse guarantee”). With an ordinary universal life product, the policy could lapse under certain circumstances. Examples: (e.g., interest rates fall below projections, insurance costs or administrative expenses rise, etc). When you buy a policy with a “secondary guarantee,” you’re guaranteed that the policy won’t lapse. This is even if the above factors come to pass.

One of the most attractive things about universal life policies with secondary guarantees is that they provide lifelong coverage. These rates can be considerably lower than other forms of permanent insurance. That’s one of the main reasons why these policies are used for estate planning purposes. If you have a federal estate-tax liability, your main concern is liquidity at death. When you die, you don’t want your heirs to have to hastily sell off assets to pay estate taxes. With a universal life policy with secondary guarantees, the death benefit is guaranteed for life and you have the flexibility of adjusting your premiums, a valuable feature since estate tax rates and exclusion amounts keep changing from year to year.

Variable Universal Life

Variable Universal Life insurance is a flexible premium, a permanent life insurance policy that allows you to have premium dollars allocated to a variety of investment options, offering varying degrees of risk and reward. These policies are a good choice for people seeking maximum flexibility.

Should your insurance needs change over time, Variable Universal Life usually provides the flexibility to increase or decrease your amount of coverage. You can also make a lump-sum payment to increase the policy’s cash value. (The maximum lump-sum payment is subject to IRS limitations.) And, should an emergency arise and you are short on cash, you may be able to skip a scheduled payment and let the accumulated cash value cover the policy’s expenses. Keep in mind that the cost of insurance and administrative expenses are still incurred.

As your insurance needs change, it is quite probable so will your long-term investment goals and risk-tolerance levels. With Variable Universal Life, you have the flexibility to transfer funds between the investment divisions, tax-free. So, you have the freedom to make decisions based on your needs and not on the tax ramifications.