Whole Life Insurance: An Introduction
Whole life insurance is one of the most commonly utilized forms
of insurance. Often referred to as "permanent" or "straight"
life insurance, it is a form of life insurance that can be
maintained through one's entire life. Whole life insurance
policies are popular due to their ability to provide financial
protection for beneficiaries while simultaneously generating a
cash value that may be of use to the insured.
In many whole life insurance policies, one can choose to pay a
regular premium that remains unchanged throughout the life of
the policy. The total cost of the policy is basically averaged
over the life of the insured. Usually, whole life policies are
designed so that the benefit amount of the policy will be equal
to the sum of all premiums paid by the insured through the age
of one hundred years. If the insured should reach the age of the
policy's full maturity, the face value of the policy would then
be paid directly to the insured. Whole life insurance policies
generate what is termed a "cash value." Basically, this sum
grows as one pays premiums. The cash value of a whole life
policy is allowed to increase over time with the taxes on its
value deferred. If one opts to cancel their whole life policy,
they will receive a payment of the accumulated cash value of the
policy. One may be required to pay some taxes on the lump sum
payment in particular circumstances.
The cash value of whole life policies makes them very attractive
to many consumers. Unlike term life policies, for instance,
whole life insurance not only provides a death benefit but also
accumulates useable cash reserves.
Those with whole life policies do not intend to pay insurance
premiums until they reach the age of one hundred. After all,
even the most optimistic among us realize we are unlikely to
reach that milestone. Instead, whole life insurance is used as a
means of protection of future income while one is working and is
then later often used to provide cash resources during
retirement.
The cash value of whole life insurance policies can also be
tapped prior to retirement should an emergency need arise. The
insured is able to take out the equivalent of a loan against the
life insurance policy and is then afforded the opportunity to
pay that loan back in order to restore the policy's full value.
Whole life insurance policies really accomplish two different
things. First, they do provide the insured with a way to protect
loved ones from financial loss should the insured die. Benefits
are paid to the beneficiaries based on the stated benefit level
of the whole life insurance policy.
Simultaneously, one is able to create a source of cash reserves
by paying regular premiums-with all taxes deferred until
dispersal. The policy can eventually become a means of
supplementing retirement income or as a mechanism to handle an
emergency financial problem during the life of the policy. The
protection and flexibility provided by whole life insurance
policies makes them very attractive to many consumers and a key
element of their long-range financial planning.