product-knowledge

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Life insurance product knowledge covering whole life, term life, universal life, variable universal life, indexed universal life, and joint survivorship products. Use when explaining product features, riders, options, or when helping customers understand their coverage. Covers policy mechanics, nonforfeiture options, dividend options, death benefit options, and common riders.

scanady By scanady schedule Updated 3/2/2026

name: product-knowledge description: Life insurance product knowledge covering whole life, term life, universal life, variable universal life, indexed universal life, and joint survivorship products. Use when explaining product features, riders, options, or when helping customers understand their coverage. Covers policy mechanics, nonforfeiture options, dividend options, death benefit options, and common riders.

Product Knowledge Skill

You are an expert in life insurance products, understanding the mechanics, features, options, and trade-offs of each product type. You explain complex insurance concepts in clear, accurate terms.

Product Types

Whole Life (WL)

How it works: Provides guaranteed lifetime coverage with level premiums. Builds guaranteed cash value on a fixed schedule. Participating policies earn dividends (not guaranteed).

Feature Details
Coverage duration Lifetime (to maturity age, typically 100 or 121)
Premiums Level, guaranteed — never increase
Cash value Guaranteed accumulation schedule
Dividends Participating policies earn dividends (not guaranteed)
Death benefit Guaranteed face amount (plus any PUAs or dividend additions)
Flexibility Low — fixed premiums, fixed face amount
Best for Guaranteed lifetime protection, estate planning, conservative accumulation

Dividend Options (Participating Policies):

Option Description
Paid-Up Additions (PUAs) Dividends purchase small blocks of additional paid-up whole life — increases death benefit and cash value over time
Accumulate at Interest Dividends held in an interest-bearing account by the insurer
Premium Reduction Dividends applied to reduce the premium payment
Cash Dividends paid out in cash to the owner
One-Year Term Dividends purchase 1-year term insurance equal to the cash value

Term Life (TL)

How it works: Pure death benefit protection for a specified period (10, 20, or 30 years). No cash value. Level premiums for the term period, then substantially increase if renewed.

Feature Details
Coverage duration 10, 20, or 30 years (level period)
Premiums Level during term, then increase annually
Cash value None
Renewable Yes, annually at attained-age rates after level period
Convertible Yes — convert to permanent without evidence of insurability
Best for Temporary needs — mortgage protection, income replacement, supplemental coverage

Conversion privilege: The most valuable feature of term insurance. Allows the owner to convert to a permanent product without medical underwriting. Key details:

  • Conversion deadline varies by product and insurer
  • Available products limited to current offerings at time of conversion
  • Conversion is at attained age (higher premium) unless original-age conversion is offered
  • No evidence of insurability required — even if health has declined

Universal Life (UL)

How it works: Flexible permanent coverage. Owner can vary premiums (above a minimum) and adjust the death benefit. Cash value earns a credited interest rate (with a guaranteed minimum). Monthly cost of insurance (COI) and charges are deducted from the account value.

Feature Details
Coverage duration To maturity (age 100+), subject to sufficient funding
Premiums Flexible — minimum, target, or maximum
Cash value Earns current credited rate (with guaranteed minimum, typically 2-3%)
Death benefit options Option A (level) or Option B (increasing — face + account value)
Flexibility High — adjust premiums, death benefit, and payment schedule
Best for Flexible lifetime coverage, business planning, key person insurance

Caution: UL policies can lapse if underfunded. The guaranteed rates may not sustain the policy long-term. Regular reviews are essential.

Variable Universal Life (VUL)

How it works: Like UL, but the account value is invested in sub-accounts (similar to mutual funds). Higher growth potential but also investment risk — the cash value can decrease.

Feature Details
Coverage duration To maturity, subject to sufficient funding
Premiums Flexible
Cash value Invested in sub-accounts (equities, bonds, money market, etc.)
Investment risk Yes — owner bears the investment risk
Death benefit options Option A or Option B
Flexibility Very high — premiums, death benefit, and investment allocation
Best for Clients who want market exposure within a life insurance wrapper
Requires Securities license to sell; registered as a security

Indexed Universal Life (IUL)

How it works: Like UL, but the account value is credited interest based on the performance of a market index (e.g., S&P 500), subject to a cap and floor. The floor (typically 0%) protects against market losses.

Feature Details
Coverage duration To maturity, subject to sufficient funding
Premiums Flexible
Cash value Credited based on index performance, subject to cap/floor/participation rate
Index options Typically S&P 500, with annual point-to-point crediting
Floor 0% — account value never decreases due to index performance
Cap Maximum credited rate per segment (e.g., 10-12%)
Participation rate Percentage of index return credited (e.g., 100%)
Best for Growth potential with downside protection, retirement income planning

Joint Survivorship / Second-to-Die (JL)

How it works: Insures two lives (typically spouses) and pays the death benefit upon the second death. Used primarily for estate planning to provide liquidity for estate taxes.

Feature Details
Coverage duration Lifetime — pays on second death
Premiums Generally lower than two individual policies (lower mortality risk)
Cash value Depends on the underlying product (usually whole life or UL)
Best for Estate tax liquidity, wealth transfer, charitable giving
Common ownership Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) to keep proceeds out of taxable estate

Common Riders

Rider What It Does Available On
Waiver of Premium Waives premiums (or COI) if the insured becomes disabled All products
Accelerated Death Benefit (ADB) Advances a portion of the death benefit for terminal, chronic, or critical illness All products
Accidental Death Benefit Pays an additional benefit if death is accidental All products
Children's Term Rider Provides term coverage on the insured's children (typically $10-25K each) WL, UL, IUL
Guaranteed Insurability (GIO) Allows additional coverage purchases at specified dates without evidence WL, TL
Return of Premium (ROP) Refunds total premiums if the insured survives the term period TL
Paid-Up Additions (PUA) Allows additional premium to purchase paid-up whole life additions WL
Overloan Protection Prevents lapse if loan balance approaches account value UL, VUL, IUL
Long-Term Care Accelerates death benefit for qualifying long-term care expenses WL, UL, IUL
Index Lock Allows locking in index gains mid-segment IUL

Nonforfeiture Options

If a permanent policy lapses (premiums stop and cash value is insufficient), the owner has nonforfeiture options:

Option Description
Cash Surrender Receive the net cash surrender value in a lump sum. Policy terminates.
Reduced Paid-Up Use the cash value to purchase a paid-up policy at a reduced face amount. No further premiums due.
Extended Term Use the cash value to purchase term insurance at the original face amount for as long as the value will support.
Automatic Premium Loan If elected, the company automatically borrows from cash value to pay overdue premiums.

Death Benefit Options (UL/VUL/IUL)

Option Description Death Benefit
Option A (Level) Death benefit stays level at the face amount Face amount (or corridor minimum if CSV exceeds net amount at risk)
Option B (Increasing) Death benefit equals face amount plus account value Face amount + current account value

Option A is more cost-efficient (lower COI) because the net amount at risk decreases as cash value grows. Option B provides a larger death benefit but costs more (higher COI) because the net amount at risk stays level.

Tax Considerations

Topic Rule
Death benefit Generally income-tax-free to beneficiaries (IRC §101(a))
Cash value growth Tax-deferred while inside the policy
Policy loans Not taxable as long as the policy remains in force
Surrender Gain (cash value minus cost basis) is taxable as ordinary income
Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) If the policy fails the 7-pay test, withdrawals and loans are taxed LIFO (gains first) and subject to 10% penalty if under age 59½
1035 Exchange Tax-free exchange of one life insurance policy for another (same insured)
Transfer for value If a policy is sold or transferred for valuable consideration, the death benefit may become partially taxable

Using This Skill

Use this knowledge when:

  • Explaining product features or options to a customer or agent
  • Processing transactions that depend on understanding product mechanics (e.g., conversion privilege, nonforfeiture options)
  • Evaluating whether a requested change is consistent with the product's design
  • Advising on the implications of a policy action (loan, surrender, conversion)
  • Comparing products for suitability purposes

Response Constraint

  • Provide requested product explanations and implications only.
  • Do not include follow-up recommendations, option menus, or "next steps" prompts.
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