Universal Life Insurance Explained
Universal Life is like term life insurance with an investment
attached. It is a kind of flexible policy that lets you vary your
premium payments and/or adjust the face amount of your coverage.
The premiums you pay (less expense charges) go into a policy with
an attached investment generally consisting of a short-term money
instrument yielding a modest return.
If your yearly premium payment plus the earnings on your account
is less than the total charges, your account value will become
lower. If it keeps dropping, eventually your coverage will end.
You may need to increase your premium payments or lower your death
benefits to keep the policy in force. Even if there is enough
in your account to pay the premiums, continuing to pay premiums
yourself means that you build up more cash value.
Generally, you'll have lower premiums than with whole insurance
but still keep most of the same benefits. However, the cash value
build-up is not guaranteed and depends heavily on the your invested
premiums' performance. Basically, cheaper rates but less certainty
about a cash value.
Universal life can be a very solid base for an overall protection
strategy and can easily and economically be supplemented by other
policies to ensure total protection. An insurance professional
can assist you in constructing a strategy to bring you the security
only well planned protection can bring.
See also the
Frequently
Used Life Insurance terms.
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