Life Insurance Definitions and Life Insurance Glossary Terms
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 applicant for
insurance.
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 also
Dividend.)
Permanent (Life Insurance)
Any form of life insurance except term; generally
insurance that builds up a cash value, such as whole
life.
Policy owner
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 to keep it in force.
Renewable Term Insurance
Term insurance which can be renewed at the end of
the term, at the option of the policyowner 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 policyowner 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 lifetime protection at a level premium.
Premiums must generally be paid for as long as the
policy is in force.
