Chapter 9: Life Insurance Policy Provisions Flashcards
Policy Declaration Pages Include:
- the name of the insurance company
- details specific to the policy.
- a general description of the type of insurance the policy contract provides.
- a statement about the policy’s free-look provision.
- the insurer’s promise to pay.
standard policy provisions laws
The standard policy provisions laws of the various states require that life and health insurance policies include certain provisions but allow the insurance companies to select the actual wording as long as it is at least as favorable to the policyowner as the statutory
language.
Late Remittance Offers
Such an offer is made solely at the insurer’s option. It is not a right of the policyowner or an obligation of
the insurer included in the insurance contract under the requirements of the law.
Grace Period
The grace period provision grants the policyowner an additional period of time to pay any premium after it has become due.
The standard length of the grace period is 30 or 31 days in fixed-premium policies. In flexible-premium policies, such as universal life insurance, a grace period of 60 or 61 days is common.
Policy Loans
The law requires that a life insurance contract permit policy loans if the policy generates a cash value.
Policy Loan Provisions
- No credit questions asked
- Policyowner may borrow up to 90 percent to 100 percent of cash value
- Technically, insurer can delay lending for up to 6 months
- Fixed or variable interest rates charged
- Unpaid interest added to the loan balance
- No repayment schedule or requirement
- Indebtedness repaid when policy is surrendered or matures as a claim
- May include automatic premium loan feature
Incontestable Clause
An incontestability clause is a clause in most life insurance policies that prevents the provider from voiding coverage due to a misstatement by the insured after a specific amount of time has passed. State laws differ as to the form of the clause prescribed, but no state permits a clause that would make the policy contestable for more than 2 years.
Divisible Surplus
An insurer’s divisible surplus is that portion of an insurer’s surplus declared as a dividend to be distributed to the owners of participating policies.
Entire Contract Provision
Entire contract statutes ensure that the policyowner receives all documents that constitute the contract, and they also protect the policyowner against changes in the contract after the contract has been issued.
Reinstatement
Reinstatement provisions allow a policyowner to reacquire coverage under a policy that
has lapsed.
Misrepresentation
A representation is a statement in an insurance application that is substantially true to the best of the applicant’s knowledge and belief. A false representation of a material fact is a misrepresentation.
Nonforfeiture Provisions
A nonforfeiture provision in a cash value life insurance policy provides alternative ways in which the policy’s cash value can be taken out or utilized if the contract is terminated during the insured’s lifetime.
Nonforfeiture Options
Nonforfeiture laws require that a life insurance policy must make certain options available regarding how a policyowner can use the policy’s cash
value.
(1) paid-up insurance at a reduced death benefit amount.
(2) extended term insurance for the net face amount of the policy.
Cash Surrender Options
Under the cash surrender option the policyowner may surrender the policy at any time for its cash value, minus any policy indebtedness, plus accumulated dividends.
Reduced Paid-up Insurance Option
The reduced paid-up insurance option permits the policyowner to take a reduced amount of paid-up whole life insurance, payable upon the same conditions as the original policy.