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Indexed universal life insurance (IUL) is a type of permanent life insurance that combines a lifelong death benefit with a cash value account whose growth is tied to a market index — most commonly the S&P 500. You’re not invested in the market; the carrier credits interest to your policy based on index performance, subject to a floor (usually 0%) and a cap or participation rate.

How Indexed Universal Life Works

Every premium you pay into an IUL is split into three buckets: cost of insurance, policy expenses, and cash value. Whatever is left after charges is allocated to one or more indexed accounts you choose. At the end of each segment (usually one year), the carrier credits interest based on index performance, subject to the formula in your policy.

✅ Key Features

  • Lifetime coverage to age 121 with most carriers
  • Flexible premiums — adjust within IRS limits
  • 0% floor protects principal from market losses
  • Tax-deferred cash value growth
  • Tax-free policy loans available
  • Death benefit generally income-tax-free

⚠️ Trade-offs to Know

  • Caps limit upside in strong index years
  • Carrier can lower caps and participation rates
  • Charges still apply in 0% years
  • Takes 5–10 years to build meaningful cash value
  • Underfunding can cause the policy to lapse
  • Illustrations often shown at unrealistic rates

How the Index Crediting Formula Works

Your indexed account does not earn the index’s actual return. It earns a calculated credit based on the carrier’s rules, which always include some combination of the four levers below.

Floor — Typically 0%. If the index loses 30%, your indexed account is credited 0%. Principal is protected, but internal charges still come out that year.
Cap — The maximum interest credit, often 8–12%. If the index gains 25%, you’d be credited up to the cap — not the full 25%.
Participation Rate — The percentage of index gain you receive. A 70% participation rate on a 10% index return credits 7%.
Spread — A fixed percentage subtracted from the index return. A 2% spread on a 9% index return credits 7%.

When Indexed Universal Life Is Needed

IUL is rarely the right first life insurance purchase. It tends to make sense for clients who already have core protection in place and are looking for a permanent, flexible, tax-advantaged vehicle.

Permanent Coverage with Upside — Clients who want lifetime coverage but don’t want the conservative, fixed growth of whole life.
Supplemental Retirement Income — High earners who have maxed out 401(k) and IRA contributions and want another tax-deferred bucket they can access later via tax-free policy loans.
Estate Planning — Funding an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) to provide tax-free liquidity at death.
Business Planning — Funding buy-sell agreements, key person coverage, or executive bonus arrangements where cash value can serve multiple purposes.
Flexibility — Clients whose income fluctuates and who want the ability to adjust premiums year to year within IRS guidelines.

If your need is straightforward income replacement for 20 or 30 years, term life insurance will give you many times the death benefit per dollar. IUL belongs in the conversation only after the basics are in place.

How the Cash Value Works — and Why It Takes Years to Build

The cash value in an IUL is not the same as the premiums you pay. In the early years, a large share of every premium is consumed by charges before anything reaches the indexed account.

Premium Load — A percentage skimmed off every premium — typically 5–10% in early years.
Per-Policy Fee — A flat monthly administrative charge that continues for life.
Cost of Insurance (COI) — The pure mortality charge for the death benefit. Increases every year as you age.
Per-Unit Expense Charges — Charges based on the face amount, generally heaviest in the first 10 years.
Rider Charges — Optional benefits — long-term care, chronic illness, terminal illness — each carry their own cost.
Surrender Charges — Apply for 10–15 years and reduce what you actually receive if you cancel early.

Because charges are heaviest at the front end and the cost of insurance increases every year, an IUL typically shows little to no cash value in the first 2–3 years. Meaningful accumulation generally doesn’t begin until years 5–10. The design only works long term if the policy is funded properly and held for decades. Underfunding or surrendering early is the single most common reason an IUL underperforms.

Current vs. Guaranteed Interest Rates

Every IUL illustration shows two columns: current (non-guaranteed) and guaranteed. The gap between them is where the risk lives.

Current Column — Assumes today’s caps, participation rates, and crediting assumptions stay in place forever and that the illustrated rate (often 5–7%) is earned every single year. None of that is promised — caps can be lowered at any time, and no index returns the same number every year.
Guaranteed Column — The worst-case contractual scenario: minimum guaranteed interest rate (often 0–2%), maximum guaranteed charges, lowest allowable caps. Many IULs lapse in the client’s 70s or 80s on the guaranteed column if only minimum premiums are paid.
Realistic Midpoint — A well-designed IUL is funded between these two columns and stress-tested at a conservative rate (typically 4–5%, not 7%+). Always ask to see multiple rates before purchasing.

Policy Loans: How They Work and What They Cost

Tax-free policy loans are one of the most attractive features of IUL — and one of the most misunderstood. Loans are not free money.

Loan Interest — The carrier charges interest on the loan, typically 3–6% depending on whether the loan is “fixed” or “participating.”
Crediting on Loaned Funds — Depending on the loan type, the loaned portion may earn a different (often lower) rate or may continue to participate in index crediting.
Compounding Loan Balance — Unpaid loan interest accrues and is added to the loan balance, growing significantly over time if left in place.
Death Benefit Reduction — The outstanding loan balance plus accrued interest reduces the death benefit dollar-for-dollar.
Lapse Risk — If loan plus interest ever exceeds cash value, the policy can lapse — and the gain portion above your cost basis becomes taxable as ordinary income. This is the most painful outcome in personal finance and is entirely avoidable with annual monitoring.

What Beneficiaries Actually Receive at a Claim

This is the most important section of this page, because it’s the most common source of disappointment when families file a claim. The carrier pays the net death benefit, calculated as:

Face Amount – Outstanding Loan Balance – Accrued Loan Interest – Any Unpaid Charges = Amount Paid to Beneficiaries
No Double Payout — Beneficiaries do not receive both the cash value and the death benefit. Under the standard Option A (Level) death benefit, the cash value is included within the death benefit. Only Option B (Increasing) pays cash value on top — and Option B carries higher costs.
Loan Balance Subtracted — A $500,000 IUL with a $180,000 loan balance pays $320,000 to beneficiaries, not $500,000.
Accrued Interest Subtracted — Loan interest that was never paid out of pocket has been compounding for years and further reduces the payout.
Tax Treatment — Death benefits are generally income-tax-free under IRC §101(a), but may be includable in the taxable estate depending on ownership.

An IUL is a powerful planning tool when properly designed, funded, and reviewed annually for life. Anyone selling an IUL on a single illustration at the highest legal rate — without showing the guaranteed scenario and a stress-tested midpoint — is not doing the client any favors.

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