Skip to main content

Cash Value Life Insurance: Is It Right for You?

By 23.08.2017Blog

“Cash value” has a nice ring to it when you’re thinking about buying life insurance, but you’ll need to do some careful analysis to learn whether a cash-value policy is worth the cost.

The phrase “cash value” refers to a savings component of permanent life insurance, such as universal life and whole life insurance.

The price you pay for these policies goes toward lifelong insurance coverage and funding of the cash-value account.

This is different from term life insurance, which provides temporary coverage for a certain period, such as 10, 20 or 30 years, and has no cash value. You can’t borrow against a term life policy or cash it in for money. The only time it pays out is if you die within the term. That’s why it’s so affordable, especially for young and healthy people.

What you can do with the cash

The cash value is a big selling point that insurance agents emphasize when selling permanent life insurance. Here’s what you can do with the cash value in a life insurance policy:

  • Make partial withdrawals. If the money is not repaid, the withdrawals will reduce the policy’s death benefit — the payment to the beneficiary when you die.
  • Borrow against the cash value. You can take out loans for anything you’d like. You’ll have to repay them, though, with interest, to maintain the death benefit.
  • Withdraw all the cash value and surrender the policy. This will end the life insurance coverage, and in the early years you will pay a surrender fee to the insurance company.
  • Use it to pay premiums once the cash value reaches a high enough level.

How the cash value grows depends on the kind of permanent life insurance policy you buy:

  • A whole life insurance policy guarantees a fixed rate of return on the cash value.
  • With indexed universal life, the cash value growth is tied to a stock index, such as the Standard & Poor’s 500.
  • With variable universal life, the cash value is invested in various accounts of stocks, bonds or mutual funds. This kind of policy offers the greatest potential returns, but comes with the risk that you could lose cash value if the investments tank.
READ MORE

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.