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What is the fundamental purpose of life insurance?
- Investment growth
- To provide financial protection to beneficiaries against the financial loss caused by the insured's death ✓
- Tax avoidance
- Estate planning only
Life insurance exists primarily to transfer the financial risk of premature death from the insured's family or dependents to the insurance company. In exchange for premium payments, the insurer pays a death benefit to named beneficiaries upon the insured's death. While some life insurance products h…
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Who must have an insurable interest in the insured at the time a life insurance policy is issued?
- No one
- The policyowner (the applicant) must have an insurable interest in the insured's life at the time of application ✓
- The beneficiary
- Only the insurance company
Insurable interest is the legal requirement that the policyowner have a genuine financial or familial stake in the continued life of the insured at the time of application. It prevents life insurance from being used as gambling on strangers' lives. Insurable interest is presumed in close family rela…
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What is the defining characteristic of term life insurance?
- It builds cash value
- It provides coverage for a specified period (term) with no cash value, paying a death benefit only if the insured dies during the term ✓
- It lasts forever
- Premiums always decrease
Term life insurance provides pure death benefit protection for a specified period — commonly 10, 20, or 30 years — and pays nothing if the insured survives the term. It has no cash value, no savings component, and no investment feature. Premiums are typically much lower than permanent insurance beca…
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What is the defining characteristic of whole life insurance?
- Coverage for only 10 years
- Permanent coverage that builds cash value and has level premiums for life ✓
- Only pays for accidental death
- Has no premium
Whole life insurance is permanent life insurance that provides coverage for the insured's entire life as long as premiums are paid. Three defining features: (1) level premiums that stay the same throughout the life of the policy, (2) a guaranteed cash value that grows tax-deferred over time, (3) a g…
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How does universal life insurance differ from whole life?
- It is the same as whole life
- Universal life has flexible premiums and an adjustable death benefit, with cash value that earns interest based on current market rates (subject to a guaranteed minimum) ✓
- Universal life has no cash value
- Universal life only covers accidental death
Universal life (UL) insurance is a permanent policy with greater flexibility than whole life. Key features: (1) flexible premiums — within limits, the policyowner can adjust premium payments, (2) adjustable death benefit — the face amount can be increased (with new underwriting) or decreased, (3) ca…
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What is the 'grace period' in a life insurance policy?
- A period after death before the claim is paid
- A period (typically 30-31 days) after a premium due date during which the policy remains in force even though the premium has not been paid ✓
- A period before the policy takes effect
- Time for the insurer to investigate
The grace period is a standard policy provision giving the policyowner extra time (typically 30 or 31 days, sometimes longer) to pay a premium after the due date without losing coverage. If the insured dies during the grace period, the death benefit is still paid but the unpaid premium is deducted. …
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What is the 'incontestability clause'?
- A clause allowing endless disputes
- A provision that after the policy has been in force for a specified period (usually 2 years), the insurer cannot contest the validity of the policy based on misrepresentation in the application — except for fraud in some states ✓
- A provision that cannot be appealed
- A guarantee of cash value growth
The incontestability clause is a fundamental consumer protection in life insurance: after the policy has been in force for a specified period (typically two years from issue), the insurer cannot deny a claim based on misstatements or omissions in the original application. The provision balances the …
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What is the 'suicide clause' in life insurance?
- A clause preventing all coverage
- A provision that if the insured dies by suicide within a specified period (typically 1-2 years), the insurer refunds premiums paid but does not pay the death benefit ✓
- Pays double benefit for suicide
- Has no effect on the policy
The suicide clause limits the insurer's liability for suicide deaths during an initial exclusion period (typically 1 or 2 years from policy issue date). If suicide occurs during this period, the insurer returns the premiums paid (sometimes with interest) but does not pay the death benefit. After the…
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What is a 'waiver of premium' rider?
- Allows skipping a premium payment for any reason
- If the insured becomes totally disabled, premiums are waived (paid by the insurer) and the policy stays in force ✓
- Reduces premium permanently
- Refunds all premiums
The waiver of premium rider provides that if the insured becomes totally disabled (definitions vary, often inability to work in any occupation) for a waiting period (typically 6 months), the insurance company waives premium payments and continues the policy in force as if premiums were being paid. C…
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What is an 'accelerated death benefit' rider?
- Pays double if death is sudden
- Allows the insured to receive a portion of the death benefit while still living if diagnosed with a qualifying condition (terminal illness, chronic illness, or critical illness) ✓
- Increases premiums after a claim
- Only applies after age 65
The accelerated death benefit (ADB) rider — also called a living benefits rider — lets the insured access part of the death benefit while still alive if diagnosed with a qualifying condition. Three main triggers: (1) terminal illness (life expectancy under a specified period, typically 12-24 months)…
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What is the primary purpose of underwriting in life insurance?
- To delay applications
- To assess the applicant's risk and determine if and how the insurer will issue the policy, including the premium rate ✓
- To charge maximum premiums
- To deny most applications
Underwriting is the process of evaluating an applicant's mortality risk to decide whether to issue a policy and at what premium. Underwriters consider: age, gender, health history (medical records, current conditions), family medical history, lifestyle factors (smoking, alcohol use, dangerous hobbie…
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What is 'adverse selection' in insurance?
- Choosing the wrong policy
- The tendency for higher-risk individuals to seek insurance more than lower-risk individuals — managed through underwriting and pricing ✓
- Selecting the wrong beneficiary
- Picking the wrong agent
Adverse selection is the tendency for people with higher-than-average risk to seek insurance more eagerly than people with lower-than-average risk, while the insurer has incomplete information about individual risks. Left unmanaged, adverse selection makes pricing unsustainable — the insurer collect…
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What information sources do life insurance underwriters typically use?
- Only the application
- Application, Medical Information Bureau (MIB) reports, attending physician statements, medical exams, prescription drug histories, motor vehicle reports, and sometimes inspection reports ✓
- Only a credit check
- Only social media
Life insurance underwriting draws on multiple sources: (1) The application — health questions answered by the applicant; (2) Medical Information Bureau (MIB) — an insurance industry database that shares medical and other risk information among member companies; (3) Attending physician statements — r…
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How are life insurance death benefits typically taxed when paid to a named beneficiary?
- Taxed as ordinary income
- Generally received income tax-free by the beneficiary, although estate tax may apply to large estates ✓
- Subject to capital gains tax
- Always taxed at 50%
Life insurance death benefits paid to a named beneficiary are generally received income tax-free under federal tax law. This is one of the major tax advantages of life insurance. The income tax exclusion applies to the lump-sum death benefit; if the beneficiary chooses to take the proceeds in instal…
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How is the cash value growth inside a permanent life insurance policy taxed?
- Taxed annually as ordinary income
- Grows tax-deferred — no tax is owed on the growth as long as it stays inside the policy; taxes apply only on withdrawals above basis or on surrender ✓
- Always taxed at capital gains rate
- Tax-free in all circumstances
Cash value inside a permanent life insurance policy grows tax-deferred — no income tax is owed on annual interest, dividends, or growth as long as it remains inside the policy. This is one of the tax advantages of permanent life insurance. Tax treatment of distributions: (1) Withdrawals — generally …
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What is an annuity?
- A type of life insurance
- A contract between an individual and an insurance company providing periodic payments for a specified period or for life — essentially the inverse of life insurance ✓
- A government retirement benefit
- A savings account at a bank
An annuity is a contract with an insurance company that provides periodic payments to the annuitant. Where life insurance addresses the risk of premature death (paying when the insured dies too soon), an annuity addresses the risk of outliving one's resources (paying as long as the annuitant lives).…
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What does 'qualified' mean in the context of retirement plans and annuities?
- The applicant has qualified medically
- The plan meets specific IRS rules allowing pre-tax contributions and tax-deferred growth — examples include 401(k), traditional IRA, SEP-IRA ✓
- The plan is approved by the state
- The annuity is the highest quality
A 'qualified' retirement plan is one that meets specific Internal Revenue Code requirements that grant favorable tax treatment: pre-tax contributions (reducing current taxable income), tax-deferred growth (no taxes until withdrawal), and tax-deductible employer contributions. Examples: 401(k), 403(b…
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Who has the right to change the beneficiary on a life insurance policy?
- The beneficiary
- The policyowner — unless the beneficiary is named 'irrevocable', in which case the owner needs the beneficiary's consent ✓
- The insurance company
- Only a court
The policyowner — the person who owns the contract — has the right to change beneficiaries during the insured's lifetime, with one major exception: if the original beneficiary was designated as 'irrevocable', the owner cannot change them without the irrevocable beneficiary's consent. 'Revocable' des…
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What is the purpose of a 'free look' period in life insurance?
- Time for the agent to find a better policy
- A period (typically 10-30 days depending on state) during which the policyowner can return the policy for a full refund of premiums, no questions asked ✓
- Time for the insurer to inspect the policy
- A trial period with no coverage
The free-look period — required by state insurance law — gives the policyowner a window (typically 10, 20, or 30 days depending on the state) after delivery of the policy to review it and return it for a full premium refund if they are unsatisfied for any reason. The free-look provides consumer prot…
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What is 'replacement' in life insurance and what are the rules about it?
- Replacing a lost policy document
- Surrendering, lapsing, or modifying an existing policy to purchase a new one — heavily regulated because it often disadvantages the consumer; specific disclosure forms and waiting periods apply ✓
- Switching agents
- Changing the beneficiary
Replacement is the practice of surrendering, lapsing, reducing, or otherwise giving up an existing life insurance policy to purchase a new one. It is heavily regulated because replacement often disadvantages the consumer: new policies start a new contestability period and suicide exclusion, new sale…
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What are 'nonforfeiture options' in a permanent life insurance policy?
- Penalties for early termination
- The choices a policyowner has when surrendering a policy with cash value: cash surrender, reduced paid-up insurance, or extended term insurance ✓
- Options for adding riders
- Choices about premium frequency
Nonforfeiture options give the policyowner alternatives to simply taking cash and walking away when surrendering or stopping premiums on a permanent policy with cash value. Three standard options: (1) Cash surrender — take the accumulated cash value as a lump sum, policy ends; (2) Reduced paid-up in…
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What is 'variable life insurance' and how does it differ from traditional life insurance?
- It is the same as whole life
- Variable life has cash value invested in subaccounts (like mutual funds) chosen by the policyowner, with returns and cash value varying with investment performance — requires both life and securities licenses to sell ✓
- Variable life has fixed returns
- Variable life has no death benefit
Variable life insurance is a permanent policy where the cash value is invested in 'subaccounts' that function like mutual funds. The policyowner chooses the allocation among stock, bond, and money market subaccounts, and the cash value rises or falls with the investments' performance. The death bene…
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What is the role of the state insurance commissioner?
- A federal official
- The chief regulator of insurance within a state, responsible for licensing producers and insurers, approving rates and forms, examining insurer solvency, and investigating consumer complaints ✓
- An elected position only
- A purely advisory position
The state insurance commissioner (sometimes titled 'director' or 'superintendent') is the chief insurance regulator within a state. Insurance in the US is regulated primarily at the state level under the McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1945. Commissioner duties include: (1) licensing insurance producers an…
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If a smoker fails to disclose smoking on a life insurance application, what is the consequence?
- Nothing happens
- Material misrepresentation can lead to the insurer rescinding the policy during the contestability period and refunding premiums; after the contestability period, fraud may still be a basis for denial in some states ✓
- The premium is doubled
- The policy is automatically converted
Failing to disclose smoking is a material misrepresentation on the application because smoking significantly affects mortality and premium rates. Within the contestability period (typically two years), the insurer can rescind the policy upon discovery, refund premiums, and deny any claim. After the …
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What is a 'Modified Endowment Contract' (MEC)?
- A type of group policy
- A life insurance policy that has been funded too quickly relative to IRS limits (failing the '7-pay test'), resulting in less favorable tax treatment for distributions ✓
- Any term life policy
- An annuity
A Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) is a life insurance policy that has been funded with more premium dollars than IRS rules allow under the '7-pay test'. The 7-pay test compares actual cumulative premiums in the first 7 years to the cumulative premiums that would have paid up the policy in 7 level …
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What is universal life insurance and how does it differ from whole life?
- Universal life is the same as term life insurance
- Universal life offers flexible premiums and adjustable death benefits; cash value earns interest at current rates (not a fixed guaranteed rate); unlike whole life, premiums can be varied or skipped as long as sufficient cash value exists to cover policy charges ✓
- Universal life has no cash value component
- Universal life is only available for business owners
UNIVERSAL LIFE (UL) INSURANCE is a permanent life insurance product developed to offer more flexibility than the rigid whole life structure. STRUCTURE: A UL policy separates the death benefit and savings components, allowing the policyowner to see how charges are applied and how cash value grows. PR…
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What is variable life insurance, and what is the key risk that makes it different from other permanent life products?
- Variable life has no cash value
- Variable life allows the policyowner to invest the cash value in sub-accounts (similar to mutual funds); the death benefit and cash value fluctuate with investment performance; the owner bears the investment risk — cash value can decrease if investments perform poorly ✓
- Variable life is only sold by banks
- Variable life premiums increase annually
VARIABLE LIFE INSURANCE transfers the investment risk from the insurer to the policyowner — a fundamental difference from traditional permanent life insurance where the insurer bears all investment risk. STRUCTURE: The cash value is invested in SEPARATE ACCOUNT sub-accounts that function like mutual…
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What is the 'waiver of premium' rider and when does it activate?
- It allows the insured to skip premium payments at any time without consequence
- Waiver of premium suspends premium payments if the insured becomes totally disabled (as defined in the policy) for at least the elimination period (typically 6 months); premiums waived during disability do not cause the policy to lapse and must be paid back only if the disability ends ✓
- It waives premiums automatically after age 65
- It is only available on term policies
WAIVER OF PREMIUM (WP) RIDER is an important optional benefit that addresses one of the most common reasons life insurance lapses — the insured can no longer afford premiums due to disability. HOW IT WORKS: TRIGGER — total disability of the insured as defined in the rider (typically 'unable to perfo…
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A policyowner takes a policy loan against the cash value of their whole life policy. The policyowner dies before repaying the loan. What happens?
- The policy is void and no benefit is paid
- The outstanding loan balance plus accrued interest is deducted from the death benefit; the net amount is paid to the beneficiary; the policy remains in force as long as cash value minus loan balance exceeds policy charges ✓
- The beneficiary must repay the loan before receiving the death benefit
- The death benefit automatically doubles to compensate for the loan
POLICY LOANS against permanent life insurance cash value are a unique feature of these products. Understanding how they work is heavily tested on licensing exams. HOW POLICY LOANS WORK: The policyowner can borrow up to the cash surrender value (minus any surrender charges) at any time without a cred…
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What is the 'material misrepresentation' rule in life insurance applications?
- Insurers may rescind a policy for any error, no matter how small
- If an applicant makes a false statement that is material to the insurer's decision to issue the policy (or at what premium), the insurer may void the policy — but only within the contestability period (typically 2 years); after 2 years, the policy is generally incontestable even if the misrepresentation would have resulted in denial ✓
- Misrepresentations are ignored as long as premiums are paid
- Only intentional fraud invalidates a policy; innocent mistakes never matter
MATERIAL MISREPRESENTATION and the INCONTESTABILITY CLAUSE interact in a way that is heavily tested on licensing exams. MATERIALITY: A misrepresentation is 'material' if it would have affected the insurer's underwriting decision — either to: decline the application entirely; issue the policy at a hi…
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What is a 'beneficiary designation' and what is the difference between a revocable and irrevocable beneficiary?
- The beneficiary is always the next of kin, automatically
- The beneficiary is the person designated to receive the death benefit; a REVOCABLE beneficiary can be changed by the policyowner at any time without the beneficiary's consent; an IRREVOCABLE beneficiary cannot be changed, the policy cannot be borrowed against, and the policy cannot be surrendered without the irrevocable beneficiary's written consent ✓
- All beneficiaries have the same rights as the policyowner
- Beneficiary designations automatically update when the policyowner marries or divorces
BENEFICIARY DESIGNATIONS are one of the most important elements of a life insurance policy — they determine who receives the death benefit and under what conditions. REVOCABLE BENEFICIARY (default designation in most policies): The policyowner can change the beneficiary at any time without notifying…
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How is the death benefit from a life insurance policy generally taxed to the beneficiary?
- Fully taxable as ordinary income
- Generally INCOME TAX FREE to the beneficiary when received as a lump sum — this is one of the most significant tax advantages of life insurance; however, if interest accumulates on the benefit after the insured's death before payment, that interest IS taxable ✓
- Subject to capital gains tax only
- Taxed at the insured's marginal income tax rate
THE INCOME TAX-FREE DEATH BENEFIT is the foundational tax advantage of life insurance and one of the most tested topics on licensing exams. IRC SECTION 101(a): Life insurance death benefits paid by reason of the death of the insured are EXCLUDED from the beneficiary's gross income (not taxable). Thi…
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What is 'twisting' in the context of life insurance regulations?
- A yoga practice for insurance agents
- An illegal practice of inducing a policyholder to lapse, surrender, or replace an existing life insurance policy by using misrepresentation or incomplete comparisons — it is a violation of state insurance law and agent ethics codes ✓
- Adding a twist to a policy's terms during the sales presentation
- Selling policies with provisions that can be changed after issuance
TWISTING is one of the specifically named UNFAIR TRADE PRACTICES prohibited under virtually every state's insurance code. DEFINITION: Twisting occurs when an agent induces a policyowner to REPLACE an existing insurance policy with a new one through: misrepresentation of the facts; incomplete, mislea…
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What does a 'free-look' period allow a policyholder to do?
- Look at the policy before deciding whether to apply for it
- Return the policy within a specified period (typically 10 days for most policies, 30 days for senior replacement policies in many states) for a full refund of all premiums paid, no questions asked ✓
- Get a free consultation with a competing agent
- View other company's policy illustrations before committing
THE FREE-LOOK PERIOD (also called the right to return or free examination period) is a consumer protection provision required by state law in every state for life insurance policies. HOW IT WORKS: After the policy is DELIVERED to the policyowner (not from the date of issue — from actual delivery), t…
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What is 'insurable interest' and why must it exist at the time a life insurance policy is purchased?
- The insurance company's interest in collecting premiums
- A person has insurable interest in another if they would suffer a genuine financial loss from that person's death; insurable interest must exist at the time of APPLICATION for a life policy (not necessarily at death) to prevent policies from being used as wagering instruments ✓
- The amount of premium that must be paid annually
- A measure of how interested the insured is in keeping the policy active
INSURABLE INTEREST is a foundational legal requirement for all insurance contracts — it is what distinguishes life insurance from gambling. WITHOUT INSURABLE INTEREST, an insurance contract would be a wager on another person's death, which is both unethical and illegal. WHO HAS INSURABLE INTEREST IN…
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What is a 'modified endowment contract' (MEC) and what triggers MEC status?
- A MEC is a standard whole life policy with a higher cash value
- A MEC is a life insurance policy that has failed the 7-pay test — it has been funded too rapidly in the first 7 years, causing it to lose favourable life insurance tax treatment; MECs are treated like annuities for tax purposes — withdrawals are taxable as ordinary income, and a 10% penalty applies to distributions before age 59½ ✓
- A MEC is a term policy converted to permanent
- A MEC provides double the death benefit with no additional premium
MODIFIED ENDOWMENT CONTRACT (MEC) status is triggered when a life insurance policy is funded so rapidly that it fails the TAMRA '7-pay test.' THE 7-PAY TEST: A policy becomes a MEC if the cumulative premiums paid in the first 7 years exceed what would have been required for a fully paid-up policy in…
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What is a '1035 exchange' and why is it important to life insurance policyholders?
- A special endorsement rider that modifies policy terms
- A tax-free transfer of the cash value from one life insurance policy to another life insurance policy (or to an annuity) — the 1035 exchange allows policyholders to replace an old policy with a better one without triggering a taxable event on the accumulated gain ✓
- A government programme for low-income life insurance buyers
- A type of accelerated death benefit
SECTION 1035 OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE allows tax-free exchanges of certain insurance and annuity products. PERMITTED 1035 EXCHANGES: Life insurance → life insurance (same insured); Life insurance → annuity (tax-deferred); Annuity → annuity (same annuitant); Endowment → annuity. NOT PERMITTED: An…
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What is the 'accidental death benefit' (ADB) rider and how does it affect the death benefit payout?
- It provides a death benefit only if the insured dies from an accident
- It provides an additional death benefit (often equal to the base face amount, creating 'double indemnity') if the insured dies as the result of a covered accident — the total payout is the base death benefit plus the ADB amount ✓
- It reduces the base death benefit in exchange for accident coverage
- It covers medical expenses from accidents only, not the death benefit
ACCIDENTAL DEATH BENEFIT (ADB) RIDER — also called 'double indemnity' — pays an additional death benefit on top of the base policy face amount if the insured dies as a result of a covered accident. TYPICAL STRUCTURE: ADB rider amount = base face amount; so if the base policy is $250,000 and the insu…
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What is the 'replacement regulation' process when a life insurance sale involves replacing an existing policy?
- Replacement requires no special process — agents can replace any policy at any time without disclosure
- Replacement transactions require: written disclosure to the applicant that they are replacing existing coverage; comparison documents (illustration showing old vs new); notification to the existing insurer; a 30-day free-look period for the new policy; the agent must document that the replacement is in the client's best interest ✓
- Replacement is prohibited within the first 5 years of a policy
- Only the insured can initiate a replacement — agents may not suggest it
REPLACEMENT REGULATIONS exist in every state to protect consumers from the financial harm of unnecessary policy replacements. A REPLACEMENT occurs when a new life insurance policy is purchased and existing life insurance (on the same insured) will be: lapsed, forfeited, or surrendered; converted to …
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A policyowner takes a $30,000 partial surrender from their whole life policy. Their cost basis (premiums paid minus dividends) is $45,000 and the total cash value is $80,000. How is this partial surrender taxed?
- The full $30,000 is taxable as ordinary income
- For non-MEC policies, partial surrenders use FIFO — basis comes out first, tax-free; since the basis ($45,000) exceeds the amount withdrawn ($30,000), the entire $30,000 is a return of basis and is NOT taxable; tax would apply only if withdrawals exceeded the $45,000 basis ✓
- The $30,000 is taxed as a capital gain
- The gain is calculated as $30,000 × (gain/total cash value)
TAXATION OF PARTIAL SURRENDERS from non-MEC life insurance policies uses FIFO (First In, First Out) accounting — the policyholder's own cost basis is considered to come out first, before any gain. CALCULATION: Basis = $45,000 (premiums paid minus any dividends received on a tax-free basis); Cash val…
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What is the 'entire contract clause' in a life insurance policy?
- A clause allowing the insurer to change policy terms at any time
- A provision stating that the policy document plus any attached application constitutes the entire agreement between the insurer and policyowner — no oral promises or side agreements outside the written policy are binding ✓
- A clause requiring the insured to pass a medical exam annually
- A provision limiting the death benefit to the first 3 years of the policy
THE ENTIRE CONTRACT CLAUSE is a mandatory provision in virtually all state insurance codes, required to be included in every life insurance policy. PURPOSE: Protects both parties by defining what the contract actually is; prevents disputes about oral promises, side letters, or verbal representations…
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What is 'key person insurance' and who owns the policy?
- Insurance purchased by an employee on their own life
- Life insurance purchased by a BUSINESS on the life of a key employee — the business is both the owner and beneficiary; the purpose is to protect the business from financial loss caused by the death of an employee whose contributions are critical to operations ✓
- Insurance purchased by a bank to protect against loan defaults
- A type of group insurance available only to executives
KEY PERSON INSURANCE (also called key man insurance) is a business planning use of life insurance that addresses a specific financial risk: what happens to a business when an irreplaceable person dies? STRUCTURE: INSURED: The key employee (must consent to be insured); OWNER: The business entity (not…
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A policyholder has a 'guaranteed insurability' rider on their whole life policy. What does this allow?
- The policy cannot be cancelled under any circumstances
- The rider allows the policyholder to purchase additional life insurance at specified future dates or life events (marriage, birth of child) without providing new evidence of insurability — regardless of changes in their health since the original policy was issued ✓
- It guarantees that premiums will not increase
- It guarantees a minimum interest rate on the cash value
THE GUARANTEED INSURABILITY RIDER (GI RIDER) — also called the guaranteed purchase option (GPO) — addresses one of the most significant planning risks: becoming uninsurable before you need more coverage. VALUE OF THE RIDER: If the insured develops a serious health condition (cancer, heart disease, d…
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What is an 'insurance guaranty association' and what protection does it provide to policyholders?
- A federal agency that regulates all insurance company investments
- A state-mandated organisation that provides limited protection to policyholders if their licensed insurer becomes insolvent — it pays claims up to state-specified limits on behalf of the failed insurer ✓
- A private rating agency that scores insurance company financial strength
- A federal bailout fund for failing insurance companies
STATE INSURANCE GUARANTY ASSOCIATIONS are the insurance industry's equivalent of FDIC protection for bank deposits — they protect consumers from the insolvency of their insurance carrier. STRUCTURE: Every state has a life and health insurance guaranty association AND a separate property and casualty…
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What is a 'non-qualified deferred compensation plan' (NQDC) and how is life insurance sometimes used in connection with it?
- A qualified retirement plan that follows ERISA rules
- An arrangement where an employer promises to pay deferred compensation to a key employee in the future — often informally funded with corporate-owned life insurance (COLI) to create an asset that matches the liability ✓
- A personal savings account funded by the employee only
- A health insurance plan for executives
NON-QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION (NQDC) is a promise by an employer to pay compensation to a key employee at a future date (retirement, death, disability, or separation). CONTRAST WITH QUALIFIED PLANS: Qualified plans (401k, pension) follow ERISA, offer tax deductions to employer, are pre-funded,…
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What is indexed universal life insurance (IUL) and how does it differ from fixed and variable UL?
- IUL is another name for whole life insurance
- IUL credits cash value interest based on the performance of a stock market index (such as the S&P 500), subject to a floor (minimum 0%) and a cap (maximum rate) — the owner participates in market gains up to the cap without direct investment risk, unlike variable UL which has no floor ✓
- IUL guarantees returns equal to the index plus 2%
- IUL has no cash value component
INDEXED UNIVERSAL LIFE (IUL) sits between fixed UL (guaranteed but modest growth) and variable UL (market-linked with full downside risk). HOW IUL WORKS: Cash value interest is linked to the performance of an index (most commonly S&P 500 Price Return, not Total Return — dividends excluded); FLOOR: t…
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What is the 'automatic premium loan' provision in a permanent life insurance policy?
- A provision requiring the insurer to lend money to all policyholders at no cost
- An optional provision that automatically borrows from the policy's cash value to pay a premium that would otherwise be unpaid — preventing the policy from lapsing while creating a policy loan balance ✓
- A provision requiring the agent to pay premiums on behalf of the client
- A rider that increases the premium automatically each year
THE AUTOMATIC PREMIUM LOAN (APL) provision prevents unintentional policy lapse by automatically taking a policy loan to cover an unpaid premium when the cash value is sufficient. HOW IT WORKS: If a premium is due and the owner does not pay it within the grace period, the APL provision (if elected) a…
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What is the 'accidental death benefit' (ADB) rider and what does it cover?
- It covers all deaths regardless of cause
- ADB pays an additional death benefit (typically equal to the face amount — 'double indemnity') if the insured dies as a direct result of an accident, as defined in the rider — usually requiring death within 90 days of the accident and excluding excluded causes ✓
- ADB covers dismemberment only, not death
- ADB eliminates the waiting period for all death claims
ACCIDENTAL DEATH BENEFIT (ADB) RIDER — also called Double Indemnity or Accidental Death and Dismemberment (AD&D) in some contexts — provides an additional death benefit on top of the base policy's face amount if the insured dies from a qualifying accident. KEY TERMS: ADDITIONAL BENEFIT — typically e…
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What are the tax implications when a life insurance policy is surrendered for its cash surrender value?
- The full surrender value is always taxable as ordinary income
- Only the gain is taxable as ordinary income — the gain equals the CSV (cash surrender value) minus the policyowner's cost basis (total premiums paid minus dividends received tax-free); amounts up to the cost basis are a return of after-tax premiums and not taxable ✓
- Surrender proceeds are always tax-free
- Surrenders are taxed at the capital gains rate
POLICY SURRENDER TAXATION follows the FIFO (First In, First Out) rule and the return-of-basis principle. THE MATH: The policyowner's COST BASIS = total premiums paid − any dividends received (if dividends were paid tax-free); the TAXABLE GAIN = CSV − Cost Basis; the taxable gain is taxed as ORDINARY…
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What is 'rebating' in insurance, and is it always illegal?
- Rebating is always legal and encouraged to attract customers
- Rebating is offering something of value not specified in the policy (premium discounts, gifts, sharing of commissions) as an inducement to purchase insurance — it is illegal as an unfair trade practice in most states, though some states have enacted anti-rebating reform allowing limited rebating under specific conditions ✓
- Rebating only applies to property insurance
- Rebating means returning a policy to the insurer for a refund
REBATING is the practice of offering a benefit — typically a reduction in premium, cash, gifts, or sharing of the agent's commission — to induce someone to purchase an insurance policy. TRADITIONAL RULE: Rebating is an UNFAIR TRADE PRACTICE prohibited under virtually every state's insurance code; it…
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What is the principle of 'insurable interest' in life insurance, and when must it exist?
- It must exist at the time of the claim only
- It is the requirement that the policyowner have a legitimate interest in the continued life of the insured, and it must exist at the time the policy is issued (inception) ✓
- It never needs to exist
- It must exist only after the death benefit is paid
Insurable interest means the policyowner must stand to suffer a genuine loss — financial or emotional — if the insured dies, which prevents life insurance from being used as a wager on a stranger's life. In life insurance, insurable interest must exist at the time the policy is applied for and issue…
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What distinguishes whole life insurance from term life insurance?
- Whole life is cheaper and temporary
- Whole life is permanent coverage that lasts for the insured's lifetime and builds cash value, with level premiums, while term provides temporary coverage with no cash value ✓
- Whole life has no death benefit
- They are identical products
Whole life insurance is a type of permanent life insurance that provides coverage for the insured's entire lifetime (as long as premiums are paid), features level premiums, and accumulates a guaranteed cash value the policyowner can borrow against. Term life, by contrast, covers only a specified per…
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What is universal life insurance known for?
- Fixed, unchangeable premiums and death benefit
- Flexibility — it allows the policyowner to adjust premium payments and the death benefit within limits, and it accumulates cash value based on a credited interest rate ✓
- No cash value at all
- Coverage for only one year
Universal life is a type of permanent life insurance known for its flexibility: within policy limits, the policyowner can adjust the premium amount and timing and change the death benefit, and the policy builds cash value that earns interest at a credited rate (subject to a guaranteed minimum). Mont…
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What is the purpose of the 'incontestability clause' in a life insurance policy?
- It lets the insurer cancel anytime
- After the policy has been in force for a specified period (commonly two years), the insurer generally cannot contest the policy or deny a claim based on misstatements in the application (except in cases such as fraud, depending on state law) ✓
- It allows unlimited contesting of claims
- It applies only to term policies
The incontestability clause provides that once a life insurance policy has been in force for a specified period — most commonly two years — the insurer can no longer contest the validity of the policy or deny a death claim based on misstatements or omissions in the application. This protects benefic…
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What does the 'free look' provision give a new life insurance policyowner?
- A free additional policy
- A specified period (commonly 10 days or more, varying by state) after receiving the policy during which they can review it and return it for a full refund of premium ✓
- Free coverage for life
- The right to change beneficiaries only
The free look provision gives a new policyowner a specified period — commonly 10 days, though the exact length varies by state — after receiving the policy to examine it and, if not satisfied, return it for a full refund of premiums paid. This consumer-protection feature lets the buyer reconsider af…
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What are 'nonforfeiture options' in a permanent life insurance policy?
- Ways to cancel without notice
- Options that let a policyowner who stops paying premiums preserve the value built up — typically cash surrender value, reduced paid-up insurance, or extended term insurance ✓
- Penalties for late payment
- Options available only to the insurer
Nonforfeiture options protect the cash value a permanent policy has accumulated if the policyowner stops paying premiums. The standard options are: (1) cash surrender — take the accumulated cash value in cash; (2) reduced paid-up insurance — use the cash value to buy a smaller, fully paid-up permane…
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What is the function of a 'beneficiary designation' in a life insurance policy?
- It names who pays the premiums
- It names the person(s) or entity who will receive the death benefit, and can be revocable (changeable) or irrevocable (requiring the beneficiary's consent to change) ✓
- It is the same as the insured
- It determines the premium amount
The beneficiary designation names who receives the policy's death benefit when the insured dies. Beneficiaries can be primary (first in line) or contingent (who receive the benefit if the primary is deceased). A revocable beneficiary can be changed by the policyowner at any time without the benefici…
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What is the purpose of underwriting in life insurance?
- To pay claims faster
- To evaluate and classify the risk presented by an applicant so the insurer can decide whether to issue coverage and at what premium rate ✓
- To sell more policies regardless of risk
- To set the free-look period
Underwriting is the process by which an insurer evaluates the risk an applicant represents — using information such as age, health history, medical exams, lifestyle, and occupation — and classifies that risk to decide whether to offer coverage and, if so, at what premium. Risk classifications common…
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How are life insurance death benefits generally treated for federal income tax purposes?
- Always fully taxable as income
- Generally received income-tax-free by the beneficiary when paid as a lump sum ✓
- Taxed at a flat 50%
- Taxable only if the policy was term insurance
Life insurance death benefits paid to a beneficiary are generally received free of federal income tax when paid as a lump sum. This favorable tax treatment is a key advantage of life insurance. There are nuances: if the benefit is paid in installments, the interest portion may be taxable; very large…
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What is a key tax feature of the cash value growth inside a permanent life insurance policy?
- It is taxed annually as it grows
- The cash value generally grows tax-deferred, meaning gains are not taxed as they accumulate inside the policy ✓
- It is always tax-free when withdrawn
- It is taxed at the time the policy is purchased
The cash value in a permanent life insurance policy generally grows on a tax-deferred basis, meaning the policyowner does not pay income tax on the gains as they accumulate inside the policy. Taxes may apply later depending on how the value is accessed: withdrawals up to the cost basis (premiums pai…
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What is an annuity, and how does it differ from life insurance in its basic purpose?
- It is identical to life insurance
- An annuity is a contract designed to provide income, often for retirement, and protects against outliving one's money, whereas life insurance protects against dying too soon ✓
- An annuity only pays a death benefit
- An annuity is a type of term insurance
An annuity is a contract between an individual and an insurer designed primarily to provide a stream of income, often during retirement. In a sense it is the opposite of life insurance: life insurance protects against the financial risk of dying too soon (leaving dependents without support), while a…
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What is the difference between a fixed annuity and a variable annuity?
- There is no difference
- A fixed annuity guarantees a set interest rate and predictable payments, while a variable annuity's value and payments fluctuate based on the performance of underlying investment subaccounts ✓
- A fixed annuity has no payout
- A variable annuity guarantees principal growth
A fixed annuity credits a guaranteed (or minimum guaranteed) interest rate and provides predictable, stable payments; the insurer bears the investment risk. A variable annuity lets the owner allocate funds among investment subaccounts (similar to mutual funds), so the account value and the resulting…
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What is the purpose of a 'replacement' regulation in life insurance?
- To encourage replacing policies frequently
- To protect consumers when an existing policy is replaced by a new one, requiring disclosures and procedures so the consumer understands the potential disadvantages of replacing coverage ✓
- To replace the agent
- To ban all policy changes
Replacement occurs when a new life insurance policy is purchased and an existing policy is terminated, lapsed, or otherwise reduced in value in connection with the new sale. Because replacement can disadvantage the consumer — new contestability and suretment periods, surrender charges, higher premiu…
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What is 'churning' in the context of life insurance, and why is it prohibited?
- A normal sales practice
- The unethical practice of inducing a policyowner to replace policies repeatedly (often using the existing policy's values) primarily to generate commissions, which harms the consumer and is prohibited ✓
- A way to lower premiums
- A type of annuity
Churning is an unethical and prohibited practice in which an agent persuades a policyowner to repeatedly replace existing life insurance — frequently by using the cash values of the existing policy to fund the new one — primarily to generate new commissions rather than to benefit the client. Churnin…
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What is the 'law of large numbers' and why is it important to insurance?
- A rule about maximum policy limits
- A statistical principle stating that as the number of similar exposure units increases, the actual loss experience will more closely approach the predicted (expected) loss, allowing insurers to price risk accurately ✓
- A law requiring large premiums
- A rule about the number of beneficiaries
The law of large numbers is a statistical principle holding that as the number of similar, independent exposure units (such as insured lives) grows larger, the actual results will tend to come closer to the expected (predicted) results. Insurance relies on this principle: by pooling a large number o…