This glossary of terms is designed to make it easier
to understand your policy and policy options.
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Absolute Assignment: The irrevocable
transfer of ownership of a life insurance policy from one person to
another.
Accelerated Benefits: Allows for the
policyholder to receive their benefits before death, usually in cases
of terminal illness or need for long-term care.
Accelerated Endowment: A dividend option
allowing dividend accumulations to be applied to convert a life insurance
policy into an endowment, or to shorten the endowment term.
Accelerative Endowment: An option to
use policy dividends to mature a policy as an endowment before the regular
maturity date.
Accidental Death and Dismemberment Insurance: Insurance
policy that provides payment if the insured's death is the result of
an accident, or if the insured accidentally severs a limb above the
wrist or ankle joints, or totally and irreversibly loses his or her
eyesight.
Accumulation Value: Describes the total
of all premiums paid and interest credited to the Universal life account
before deductions for any expenses, loans or surrenders.
Accumulations (or Accumulation Benefits): Percentage
additions to policy benefits when the contract is continuously renewed.
AD&D: See Accidental Death and Dismemberment
Insurance
Adjustable Life Insurance: A form of
life insurance which allows changes on a policy's face amount, the amount
of premium, period of protection, and the length of the premium payment
period. Also known as Flexible Premium Adjustable Life Insurance Policy.
Adjustable Premium: The right of an
insurer to change the premium rate at the time of policy renewal.
Age: Your current age, which is a determining
factor for premium rates.
Age Change: The date on which a person's
age changes, for insurance purposes. For life insurance, this is the
date midway between the insured's natural birth dates. Health insurers
frequently use the age of the previous birth date for rate determinations.
On the date of age change, a person's age may change to that of the
last birth date, the nearer birth date, or the next birth date, depending
on the stucture used by the insurer.
Amount At Risk: The difference between
the Face Value of a Whole Life Insurance contract and the cash value
which it has built up. It is the amount the insurer would have to draw
from its own funds rather than the policy reserve were the contract
to become a death claim.
Annual Payment Annuity: An annuity purchased
by the payment of annual premiums for a specified period of time.
Assignment: The transfer of ownership
of a life insurance policy from one person to another. Also referes
to the document that effects the transfer.
Association Group Insurance: Group insurance
issued to an association rather than to an employer or a union.
Attained Age: The age an insured has
reached on a given date.
Automatic Premium Loan: A provision
authorizing the insurer to use the loan value to pay any premiums still
due at the end of the grace period.
Autopsy: The post-mortem medical examination
to determine cause of death.
Aviation Accident Insurance: Protects
individuals as passengers or pilots, usually on scheduled aircraft,
or covers the flight travel of the employees of a company under a master
policy.
Aviation Hazard: The extra hazard of
death or injury resulting from participation in aeronautics, usually
as other than a fare-paying passenger in licensed aircraft. This generally
requires an extra premium rating or waiver of certain benefits or coverage.
Backdating: A procedure for making the
effective date of a policy earlier than the application date.
Bad Faith: A breach of contract, on
the part of either the insured or the insurer.
Beneficiary: The named person who receives
the benefits of the policy upon the death of the policyholder.
Blackout Period: The period during which
a surviving spouse no longer receives survivors benefits and before
he or she is eligible for retirement benefits.
Cash Refund Annuity: An annuity contract
which provides that if when the holder dies, installments paid to him
have not totaled the amount of the premium paid for the annuity, the
difference will be paid to a designated beneficiary in a lump sum.
Cash Value (Also Surrender Value): The
amount available in cash for loans and/or withdrawals. Accessing Cash
Value may reduce the death benefit and may increase the risk of lapse.
Cash Value Account: The forced savings
account built up in whole life insurance policies and variations thereof.
These savings are culled from premium payments, and can be borrowed
against in times of emergency.
Child Life Insurance: A type of life
insurance purchased to insure the life of a child. Read more about Child
Life Insurance.
Cleanup Fund: Commonly used term for
policies whose express purpose is to pay the deceased's final expenses.
Collateral Assignment: The temporary
transfer of some benefits of a life insurance policy from one person
to another, usually used as collateral for a loan. In the event of default,
the creditor would receive proceeds only to the extent of his interest.
Combination Plan: Combining life Insurance
contracts with a side fund or auxiliary fund for the purpose of increasing
the amount of money available for a pension or annuity at some future
date.
Common Accident: An accident in which
two or more persons are injured.
Common Disaster: When the insured and
the beneficiary appear to die simultaneously with no clear evidence
of who died first.
Common Disaster Clause: The clause in
a life insurance policy that provides for how the insurer will distribute
the proceeds of the policy in the event of a common disaster.
Commutation Rights: The right of a beneficiary
to receive a lump sum of unpaid payments in an installment plan settlement.
Conditional Binding Receipt: Provides
that if a premium payment accompanies an application, the coverage will
be in force from the date of application or medical examination, if
any, whichever is later, provided the insurer would have issued the
coverage on the basis of the facts revealed on the application, medical
examination and other usual sources of underwriting information. A policy
without a conditional binding receipt is not effective until it is delivered
to the insured and the premium is paid.
Contestable Clause: A provision setting
forth the conditions where the insurer may contest or void the policy.
After that time has lapsed, normally two years, the policy cannot be
contested.
Contingent Beneficiary: A person named
beneficiary in the event the primary beneficiary dies before the policyholder.
Contract: The policy itself, in which
all coverage information and provisions and exclusions are laid out.
Only valid upon signature.
Control Provision: A policy provision,
usually for children's policies, providing that ownership control is
to be exercised by a person other than the insured.
Convertible: A policy that may be changed
to another form without evidence of insurability. Most Term policies
are convertible into permanent insurance.
Convertible Term Insurance: Term insurance
that the policy owner can exchange for a permanent insurance policy
without evidence of insurability.
Conversion Privilege: The right of an
individual to convert a Group Life policy
to an individual policy should the individual stop being a member of
the group.
Cost-of-Living Rider: Adjusts policy
benefits in relation to the change in the economic climate. Most such
riders are tied to changes in the Consumer Price Index (CPI). The amount
of insurance may be automatically increased, without evidence of insurability,
at predetermined periods up to a maximum.
Credit Life Insurance: A group life
insurance contract whereby a creditor is protected in the event of death
of the insured prior to the indebtedness being paid in full.
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Death Benefit: The amount of money paid
or due to be paid when a person insured under a life insurance policy
dies.
Decreasing Term: A type of insurance
in which the premium decreases over the period of the term, as does
the coverage; usually used as a form of mortgage insurance.
Delivery: The actual placing of a Life
Insurance policy in the hands of an insured.
Dependent Coverage: Insurance coverage
on the head of a family which is extended to his or her dependents,
including only the lawful spouse and unmarried children (age restrictions
apply) who are not yet employed on a full-time basis.
Dependent Life Insurance: A benefit
which is part of a group life insurance contract that provides death
protection to the eligible dependents of a covered employee.
Dividend: A return of part of the insurance
premium that is based on the insurer's investment, mortality and expense
experience. Dividends are not guaranteed.
Dividend Accumulation: An option which
allows the policyholder to leave any premium dividends with the insurer
to accumulate at compound interest.
Dividend Additions: An option whereby
the insured can leave dividends with the insurer, and each dividend
is used to buy a single premium life insurance policy for whatever amount
it will purchase.
Double Indemnity: Payment of twice the
basic benefit in the event of loss resulting from specified causes or
under specified circumstances such as accidental death. See also Multiple
Indemnity.
Due Date: The date on which premium
payment is due.
Endowment Insurance: A form of Life
Insurance where the face amount is payable to the insured at the end
of the contract period or to a beneficiary if the insured dies before
that. An example would be an insured purchasing an endowment payable
at age 65: If he reaches that age, the proceeds would be payable to
him. If he dies prior to that age, the proceeds would be payable to
the designated beneficiary as a Life Insurance benefit.
Excess Interest: Interest credited to
an insured's contract in excess of the amount guaranteed by the terms
of the contract.
Exclusion: A condition in an insurance
policy that denies payment in the case of certain events.
Expiry: The termination of a Term
Life Insurance policy at the end of its period of coverage.
Extended Death Benefit: A group policy
provision which will pay the life benefit when (a) the insured is totally
and continuously disabled at the time the policyholder stops paying
premium until the insured's death, and (b) if the insured dies within
one year of the date the premium payments stopped, or prior to age 65.
Face Value: The amount stated on the
face of the policy that will be paid upon the death of the policyholder.
The Face Value oes not include additional amounts payable under accidental
death or other special provisions, or acquired through the application
of policy dividends.
Facility-of-Payment Clause: A provision
found in some life policies that lets the insurer pay a portion of the
proceeds of the policy to any relative or person who has possession
of the policy and appears entitled to it. It is designed to facilitate
payment when some doubt may exist as to who the beneficiary is and to
save legal expenses in the settling of an estate.
Family Income Policy: A policy that
pays an income until a specific date to the beneficiary after the death
of the insured at which time the beneficiary is paid the face value
of the policy. The period of payment is measured from the date of the
contract. If the insured lives beyond the income period, only the face
amount is payable upon his death.
Family Maintenance Policy: A policy
that pays an income to the beneficiary starting after the death of the
insured and continuing for a stated period of time. At the end of the
income period, the face amount of the policy is paid to the beneficiary.
Family Policy: A contract that
provides insurance within a single policy for a father, mother, and
born and unborn children. The father's coverage is typically Whole
Life Insurance, with the mother and children insured for smaller
amounts of Term Insurance.
Financed Premium: The payment of insurance
premiums with funds borrowed from elsewhere.
Fixed-Amount Installments: A settlement
option under which fixed, periodic benefits payments are made until
the principal and interest are exhausted.
Fixed Benefit: A benefit where the dollar
amount does not vary.
Fixed-Period Installments: A settlement
option under which the proceeds are guaranteed to be paid in equal installments
for a specified period of time. See also Installments Certain.
Flexible Premium Adjustable Life Insurance Policy:
Also called Universal Life type policies.
Flexible Premium Policy: A policy where
the policyholder may vary the amount or timing of premium payments.
Free Look: A provision in which policyholders
have up to twenty days to examine their policies at no obligation.
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Grace Period: The amount of time that
the policyholder has to pay a late premium, usually 30-31 days, during
which time the insurance is in force.
Graded Death Benefits: When death benefits
early in the contract are less than the face amount of the policy but
increase over time. It is most commonly found in policies for infants.
Graded Premium: When the initial premium
is low and increases in steps over a period of time (usually five years),
after which it becomes a level premium.
Group Life Insurance: A type of insurance
in which a group is covered--if you are part of the group, then you
have insurance. Easily affordable and sometimes offered as part of an
employee benefits package. Read more about Group
Life Insurance.
Guaranteed Insurability: An option in
insurance contracts that allows the insured to buy additional prescribed
amounts of insurance at prescribed future time intervals without evidence
of insurability.
Income Policy: A life policy where proceeds
are paid on a monthly basis, in contrast with a lump sum.
Incontestability: In which the insurance
company cannot contest any terms and benefits of a policy due to misstatement
or misrepresentation. Usually in effect after a period of two years.
Increasing premium: A type of life insurance
in which the premiums increase over time, usually as the amount of coverage
changes, and usually an annual policy.
Installment Settlement: Payment of the
proceeds of a policy or its cash value in installments rather than in
a lump sum.
Installments Certain: A settlement option
under which the proceeds are guaranteed to be paid in equal installments
for a specified period of time. See also Fixed-Period Installments.
Insurability: Acceptability of an applicant
for insurance.
Insured (or Insured Life): The person
on whose life the policy is issued; usually the same person who owns
the policy.
Insurer: The insurance company.
Insuring clause: The portion of a policy
which describes the degree of risk the insurer is willing to assume.
Intentionality: In which the death of
an insured person results from intentional behavior; subsequently the
insurance company does not have to pay the benefits of an accidental
death policy.
Irrevocable beneficiary: A type of beneficiary
that cannot be changed without their consent.
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Jumping Juvenile: A popular name for
a life insurance policy for a child where the face value increases automatically
at a certain age (usually 21), without additional cost or a medical
examination.
Juvenile Insurance: A life insurance
policy for a child.
Lapse: When the policyholder fails to
make the premium payments and the policy becomes null and void.
Level Death Benefit Option: For Universal
Life policies, provides the greater of (1) the face amount of the
policy, or (2) a stipulated percentage of the accumulation value.
Level Premium: A type of term insurance
in which the premiums remain the same throughout the term of the policy.
The premium is usually more than the actual cost of protection early
in the policy, and less later in the policy. This reserve built up in
the early years couples with earned interest to make up for the underpayment
later in the policy.
Level Term Insurance: A type of term
policy where the face value remains the same from the effective date
until the expiration date. See also Term Life.
Life Income: A settlement option under
which equal installments are paid as long as the beneficiary lives,
even if the principal has been exhausted.
Life Insurance Trust: A type of Life
Insurance policy where a trust company is named as the beneficiary and
distributes the proceeds of the policy under the terms of the trust
agreement.
Life Paid Up At Age: Limited Payment
Life insurance where premium payments stop at a particular age, but
coverage continues. A common form would be Life Paid Up At Age 65.
Limited Payment Life: A type of life
insurance that provides protection for the whole of life with premiums
paid for a set number of years. See also Life Paid Up At Age, Paid-up
Insurance.
Limited Policies: Policies paid only
upon the occurrence of certain contingencies, such as cancer, in contrast
to policies covering all contingencies other than those excluded.
Loan (or Policy Loan): A loan taken
from the cash value account of a whole life policy (or one of its various
forms). Generally, loans may reduce the policy's death benefit and cash
value.
Lump Sum: A settlement option where
the beneficiary receives the entire proceeds of a policy at once rather
than in installments.
Maturity Date: The date on which the
face amount of a policy becomes payable.
Maturity Value: The amount payable to
a living insured at the end of an endowment period or to the owner of
a Whole Life policy if he lives past a
certain age.
Medical Examination: In which the applicant
must undergo a physical exam and give a blood and urine sample in order
to determine their health before purchasing a policy.
Minimum Deposit Policy: A Cash Value
policy that can be borrowed against immediately upon payment of the
first-year premium. This is not the case with most Life Insurance policies
due to high first-year expenses.
Misrepresentation: In which the policyholder/applicant
does not reveal any or all of their current and former health conditions.
Misstatement of Age or Sex: In which
the policyholder has intentionally or unintentionally given or recorded
the wrong age or sex on the application for their policy.
Modification: In which no person save
for those named in the policy can make any modifications to the policy.
Monthly Administration Fee: With Universal
Life insurance, an administrative fee is charged each month to
cover administrative expenses.
Mortality Table: A table that gives
the average number of deaths per age group for both men and women. A
determining factor when figuring up a premium rate.
Mortgage Insurance: A type of life insurance
that provides for the coverage of the policyholder's mortgage and any
interest and taxes. Read more about Mortgage
Life Insurance.
Multiple Protection Insurance: A combination
of Term and Whole
Life Insurance that pays some multiple of the face during the period
of the Term policy, becoming a regular Whole Life policy after the Term
policy expires. The multiple protection period is thus the period during
which both the Term and the Whole Life coverages are in effect.
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Nonforfeiture Values: The values in
a policy that, by law, the policy owner cannot forfeit even if he ceases
to pay the premiums. These benefits are the cash surrender value, the
loan value, the paid-up insurance value, and the extended term insurance
value. The policy owner may choose one of these nonforfeiture options,
but even if he fails to do so, the one specified in the contract for
such a case automatically goes into effect.
Occupational Hazard: A condition in
an occupation that increases the risk of accident, sickness, or death.
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 also Dividend.)
Parties: The specific groups named in
the policy, namely the insurer and the insured, plus any beneficiaries.
Permanent Life Insurance: Any form of
life insurance except term; generally insurance that builds up a cash
value, such as whole life. Read more about Whole
Life Insurance.
Policy Loan: A loan
taken from the cash value account of a whole life policy (or one of
its various forms).
Policy Owner: The person who owns a
life insurance policy. This is usually the insured person or policyholder,
but it may also be a relative of the insured, a partnership or a corporation.
Premium: The amount of money paid by
the insured in order to maintain their policy.
Primary Beneficiary: The first person
named in the policy as beneficiary.
Principal Sum: The amount payable in
one sum in the event of accidental death or certain accidental dismemberments.
Proceeds: The amount of money that the
insurance company is obligated to pay for the settlement of a life insurance
policy.
Provision: A condition in an insurance
policy referring to a specific event or item.
Policy Change Provision: A provision
in an insurance policy that allows the policyholder to change their
coverage as needed.
Policy Date: The date the policy goes
into effect.
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Quantity Discount: A premium discount
given for the purchase of a policy with a larger face value.
Reduced Paid-Up Insurance: A form of
insurance available as a nonforfeiture option. Provides that the cash
value of the policy be used as a single premium to purchase paid-up
insurance in whatever amount the cash value will provide.
Reinstatement: In which a lapsed policy
can be restored with evidence of insurability and paying past-due premiums
required.
Renewable Term Insurance: Term insurance
that can be renewed at the end of the term 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.
Renewal: In which the policyholder renews
an insurance policy. Can occur annually or upon expiration of the current
policy. May have to prove eligibility, and premiums may be higher.
Retroactive Conversion: The conversion
of a Term Life Insurance policy to a Cash Value form, effective from
the original issue of the Term policy.
Return of Premium Rider: Provides that,
in the event of the death of the insured within a specified period of
time, the policy will give back all premiums paid, in addition to the
face amount of the policy.
Revocable beneficiary: A type of beneficiary
that can be changed as needed; most common type.
Rider: An addition to the original policy
that covers a separate condition, such as dismemberment or disability,
or provides additional coverage.
Secondary Beneficiary: The second person
named to receive benefits upon the death of an insured if the primary
beneficiary has already died.
Self-Funded Plan: Plan of insurance
where an employer, which has fairly predictable claim costs, pays the
claims rather than an insurance company.
Single Premium Policy: A Life Insurance
policy paid for in one single premium rather than in annual premiums
over a period of time.
Split Dollar Plan: A method of purchasing
life insurance whereby an employer and employee jointly purchase the
policy, pay premiums and share in the policy's benefits.
Suicide Cause: In which the policy owner
causes his or her own death; usually not payable if occurring within
two years.
Surrender: To give up a Whole Life policy.
The insurer pays the insured the cash value which the policy has built
up if it is surrendered.
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Term life: A form of insurance that
is pure insurance and has no cash value, which lasts for a specific
pre-determined length of time, called a term.
Underwriter: A person who assesses the
eligibility and risk factor of insurance applicants.
Uniform simultaneous death act: A law
that states that if the policyholder and the primary beneficiary die
under conditions in which it is impossible to determine which died first,
it is assumed that the insured will have survived the beneficiary unless
there is a provision in the policy to the contrary.
Universal Life: A flexible life insurance
policy under which the policyholder 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. Also has a cash value
account which acts as a sort of savings account that builds interest
and can be borrowed against. Read more about Universal
Life Insurance.
Unscheduled Premium Payments: With Universal
Life insurance, the policyowner can pay extra premiums in addition to
the scheduled premium payment amount.
Variable Life: A form of whole life
insurance under which the death benefit and the cash value of the policy
fluctuate according to investment performance. Most variable life insurance
policies guarantee that the death benefit will not fall below a specified
minimum, but a minimum cash value (in the cash value account) is seldom
guaranteed. These policies are similar to stocks and money market accounts.
Read more about Variable Life Insurance.
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Waiver of Premium: This provision allows
the insured to stop paying premiums when he or she has been disabled.
In most cases, the insured must be disabled for at least six months
before the waiver can take effect.
War Clause: A provision excluding liability
of an insurer if a loss is caused by war.
Whole Life Insurance: A basic type of
permanent life insurance that, as long as the premiums are paid, can
cover the policyholder over the course of their entire life. Premiums
usually remain level with this type of policy. Read more about Whole
Life Insurance.
Yearly Renewable Term (YRT) / Annual Renewable
Term: Term Life Insurance that may be renewed annually without
evidence of insurability until some stated age.
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