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Understanding Life Insurance Illustrations
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Understanding Life Insurance Illustrations

3 min readBy TermHaven Team
Last updated:Published:

Life insurance illustrations project policy performance but can be misleading. Learn to read guaranteed vs non-guaranteed values, spot red flags, and compare policies.

Understanding Life Insurance Illustrations

When you consider purchasing a permanent life insurance policy, whether whole life, universal life, or variable universal life, you will receive a document called a life insurance illustration. This multi-page projection shows how your policy is expected to perform over time, including premium payments, cash value growth, death benefit amounts, and various charges.

Illustrations are essential decision-making tools, but they can also be deeply misleading if you do not know how to read them. Understanding what illustrations show, what they assume, and where they can lead you astray is critical for making a sound purchasing decision.

What Is a Life Insurance Illustration?

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A life insurance illustration is a numerical projection of a policy's future performance based on current assumptions. It is not a guarantee, a contract, or a promise. It is a model that shows what could happen under specific conditions.

State insurance regulators require that illustrations be provided to consumers before purchasing permanent life insurance. Every illustration must include two sets of projections:

Guaranteed values. These show the minimum performance your policy will deliver. They assume maximum contractual fees and the minimum guaranteed interest rate. Guaranteed values represent the worst-case scenario.

Non-guaranteed (current) values. These show projected performance based on the company's current dividend scale, current interest crediting rate, or current cost of insurance charges. Non-guaranteed values assume today's favorable conditions continue indefinitely.

Key Components of an Illustration

Premium outlay. Your annual or monthly premium payment.

Cash surrender value. The amount you would receive if you cancelled the policy in any given year. In early years, surrender charges can make this significantly less than total premiums paid.

Death benefit. The amount paid to your beneficiary. May increase over time as cash value accumulates or dividends purchase paid-up additions.

Policy charges. Cost of insurance, administrative fees, rider charges, and premium loads that reduce cash value growth.

Dividend projections (whole life). Projected dividends based on the current dividend scale. Not guaranteed.

Interest crediting rate (universal life). Projected cash value growth based on current rates. Can change.

How to Read an Illustration Critically

Always start with guaranteed values. If the guaranteed column shows the policy lapsing before your life expectancy, the policy carries risk.

Understand the assumption gap. The difference between guaranteed and non-guaranteed values can be enormous. A universal life illustration might show $500,000 in cash value at age 70 under current assumptions but $0 under guaranteed assumptions.

Check the interest rate assumptions. If a universal life illustration uses a 5% or 6% crediting rate in a 3% environment, the projections are overly optimistic.

Look at the crossover point. The year when cash surrender value exceeds total premiums paid. Before this point, you have negative equity.

Examine cost of insurance charges. In universal life policies, these increase with age and can consume most of the policy's internal earnings by your 70s and 80s.

Watch for vanishing premium assumptions. Some illustrations show premiums being paid from dividends after a certain number of years. If dividends decrease, you will need to resume payments.

Red Flags in Illustrations

Only showing non-guaranteed values. If your agent resists showing guaranteed values, that is a serious concern.

Unrealistic interest rates. Crediting rates significantly above current market rates project a rosier future than is likely.

Minimum premium funding. Universal life policies illustrated at minimum premium may collapse under guaranteed assumptions.

Policy loans without context. Illustrations showing tax-free retirement income through loans without disclosing lapse risk from excessive borrowing.

Cherry-picked time horizons. An illustration that looks great at year 20 may show problems at year 30. Always request projections through age 90 or 95.

Questions to Ask Your Agent

  1. What happens if dividends or interest rates decrease by 2%?
  2. At what year does cash surrender value exceed total premiums paid?
  3. What minimum premium keeps this policy in force for life under guaranteed assumptions?
  4. If I take policy loans, at what point does the policy risk lapsing?
  5. How do cost of insurance charges change as I age?
  6. Can you show me a reduced rate illustration?

Using Illustrations to Compare Policies

When comparing policies from different companies, ensure equivalent assumptions. Focus on guaranteed values for the most objective comparison. Also compare internal rate of return on both cash value and death benefit at various ages.

Make an Informed Decision

Life insurance illustrations are tools, not crystal balls. The guaranteed values tell you the floor. The non-guaranteed values tell you the ceiling. Reality falls somewhere in between.

A knowledgeable, independent agent can walk you through illustrations and help you distinguish substance from sales material. Get a quote to request illustrations from multiple carriers, or visit our whole life insurance and resources pages for more guidance on evaluating permanent life insurance options.

Affiliate Disclosure

This article may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you.
#illustrations
#whole life
#universal life
#cash value
#policy comparison

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