Beneficiary
The person(s) named in
the policy to receive the life insurance proceeds upon the death of the
insured.
Cash (Surrender) Value
The amount that is available in
cash for loans and that may be available for withdrawals. Accessing Cash
Surrender Value may reduce the death benefit and may increase the risk
of lapse.
Convertible Term Insurance
Term insurance which can be
exchanged (converted), at the option of the policy-owner and without
evidence of insurability, for a permanent insurance policy.
Dividend
A return of part of the premium on participating
insurance that is based on the insurer's investment, mortality, and
expense experience. Dividends are not guaranteed.
Face Amount
The amount stated on the face of the policy
that will be paid in case of death. It does not include additional
amounts payable under accidental death or other special provisions, or
acquired through the application of policy dividends.
Insurability
Acceptability to the company of an insurance
applicant.
Insured or Insured Life
The person on whose life the
policy is issued.
Level Premium (Life Insurance)
Life insurance for which
the premium remains the same from year to year. The premium is normally
more than the actual cost of protection during the earlier years of the
policy and less than the actual cost in the later years. The building of
a reserve is a natural result of level premiums. The payments in the
early years, together with the interest that is to be earned, serves to
balance out the underpayment of the later years.
Loan (Policy Loan)
A loan made by a life insurance company
from its general funds to a policy-owner on the security of the cash
value of a policy.
Paid-up Insurance
Insurance that will remain in force with
no need to pay additional premiums.
Participating Policy
A life insurance policy that is
eligible for the payment of dividends by the insurer (see Dividend).
Permanent (Life Insurance)
Any form of life insurance
except term; generally insurance that builds up a cash value, such as
whole life.
Policyowner
The person who owns a life insurance policy.
This is usually the insured person, but it may also be a relative of the
insured, a partnership or a corporation.
Premiums
Payments to the insurance company to buy a policy
and keep it in force.
Renewable Term Insurance
Term insurance which can be
renewed at the end of the term, at the option of the policy-owner and
without evidence of insurability, for a limited number of successive
terms. The rates generally increase at each renewal as the age of the
insured increases.
Term Insurance
Life insurance that does not build up cash
value and where the premium normally increases as the insured gets
older.
Universal Life Insurance
A flexible premium life insurance
policy under which the policy-owner may change the death benefit from
time to time (with satisfactory evidence of insurability for increases)
and vary the amount or timing of premium payments. Premiums (less
expense charges) are credited to a policy account from which mortality
charges are deducted and to which interest is credited at rates which
may change from time to time.
Whole Life Insurance
A basic type of permanent life
insurance which can provide life-time protection at a level premium.
Premiums must generally be paid for as long as the policy is in force. |