The death benefit of a whole life policy is normally the stated face
amount. However, if the policy is "participating", the death benefit
will be increased by any accumulated dividend values and/or decreased by
any outstanding policy loans. (see example below) Certain riders, such
as Accidental Death benefit may exist, which would potentially increase
the benefit.
In contrast, universal life policies (a flexible premium whole life
substitute) may be structured to pay cash values in addition to the face
amount, but usually do not guarantee lifetime coverage in such cases.
A whole life policy is said to "mature" at death or the maturity age of 100, whichever comes first.To be more exact the maturity date will be the "policy anniversary
nearest age 100". The policy becomes a "matured endowment" when the
insured person lives past the stated maturity age. In that event the
policy owner receives the face amount in cash.
With many modern whole
life policies, issued since approximately 2000, maturity ages have been
increased to 120. Increased maturity ages have the advantage of
preserving the tax-free nature of the death benefit. In contrast, a
matured endowment may have substantial tax obligations.
The entire death benefit of a whole life policy is free of income tax, except in unusual cases.This includes any internal gains in cash values. The same is true of group life, term life, and accidental death policies.
However, when a policy is cashed out before death, the treatment
varies. With cash surrenders, any gain over total premiums paid will be
taxable as ordinary income. The same is true in the case of a matured
endowment.
This is why most people choose to take cash values out as a "loan"
against the death benefit rather than a "surrender." Any money taken as a
loan is free from income tax as long as the policy remains in force.
For participating whole life policies, the interest charged by the
insurance company for the loan is often less than the dividend each
year, especially after 10–15 years, so the policy owner can pay off the
loan using dividends. If the policy is surrendered or canceled before
death, any loans received above the cumulative value of premiums paid
will be subject to tax as growth on investment.
It should be emphasized that, while life insurance benefits are
generally free of income tax, the same is not true of estate tax. In the
US, life insurance will be considered part of a person's taxable estate
to the extent he possesses "incidents of ownership." Estate planners often use special irrevocable trusts to shield life insurance from estate taxes.
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