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Accelerated
Benefits Rider:
A life insurance rider that allows for the early payment of some
portion of the policy's face amount should the insured suffer
from a terminal illness or injury.
Accidental Death Benefit Rider: A life insurance policy
rider providing for payment of an additional cash benefit
related to the face amount of the base policy when death occurs
by accidental means.
Accidental Death Insurance: Insurance providing payment
if the insured's death results from an accident.
Agent: An authorized representative of an insurance
company who sells and services insurance contracts.
Annually Renewable Term: A form of renewable term
insurance that provides coverage for one year and allows the
policy owner to renew his or her coverage each year, without
evidence of insurability. Also called yearly renewable term.
Assignment Assignment: The transfer of the ownership
rights of a Life Insurance policy from one person to another.
Attained Age: Your current age. Your attained age is one
of the factors life insurance companies use to determine your
premiums. The older you are, the greater chance you'll die while
you are covered - so the higher your premium.
Backdating: A procedure for making the effective date of
a policy earlier than the application date. Backdating is often
used to make the age of the consumer at issue lower than it
actually was in order to get lower premium. State laws often
limit to six months the time to which policies can be backdated.
Beneficiary: The person designated to receive the death
benefit when the insured dies.
Binder: A temporary insurance policy that expires at the
end of a specific time period or when the permanent policy is
written. A binder is given to an applicant for insurance during
the time the complete policy paperwork is being completed.
Cash Benefits: Money that is paid to the insured upon
settlement of a covered claim. Often found with Hospital Income
Programs, "cash benefits" are paid directly to the insured
rather than the doctor or the hospital directly.
Cash Value: The equity amount or "savings" accumulation
in a whole life policy. Claim Notification to an insurance
company that payment of an amount is due under the terms of the
policy.
Conditional Receipt: Given to policy owners when they pay
a premium at time of application. Such receipts bind the
insurance company if the risk is approved as applied for,
subject to any other conditions stated on the receipt.
Contestable Clause: A provision in an insurance policy
setting forth the conditions under which or the period of time
during which the insurer may contest or void the policy. After
that time has lapsed, normally two years, the policy cannot be
contested. Example: Suicide.
Contingent Beneficiary: Person or persons named to
receive proceeds in case the original beneficiary is not alive.
Also referred to as secondary or tertiary beneficiary.
Coverage: Another word for insurance. Insurance companies
use the term coverage to mean
either the dollar amounts of insurance purchased ($200,000 of
liability coverage), or the type of loss covered (coverage for
theft).
Conversion
Privilege:
Allows the policy owner, before an original insurance policy
expires, to elect to have a new policy issued that will continue
the insurance coverage. Conversion may be effected at attained
age (premiums based on the age attained at time of conversion)
or at original age (premiums based on ageat time of original
issue).
Convertible Term: A policy that may be changed to another
form by contractual provision and without evidence of
insurability. Most term policies are convertible into permanent
insurance.
Cross-Purchase Plan: An agreement that provides that upon
a business owner's death, surviving owners will purchase the
deceased's interest, often with funds from life insurance.
Death Benefit: The amount of money paid to the
beneficiary when the insured person dies.
Decreasing Term Insurance: Term life insurance on which
the face value slowly decreases in scheduled steps from the date
the policy comes into force to the date the policy expires,
while the premium remains level. The intervals between decreases
are usually monthly or annually.
Double Indemnity: Payment of twice the basic benefit in
the event of loss resulting from specified causes or under
specified circumstances.
Evidence of Insurability: Any statement or proof of a
person's physical condition, occupation, etc., affecting
acceptance of the applicant for insurance.
Exclusions: Specified hazards listed in a policy for
which benefits will not be paid.
Expiry: The termination of a term life insurance policy
at the end of its period of coverage.
Face Amount: The amount of insurance provided by the
terms of an insurance contract, usually found on the first page
of the policy. In a life insurance policy, the death benefit.
Final Expenses: Expenses incurred at the time of a
person's death. These include funeral costs, court expenses
associated with probating his or her will, current bills or
debt, and taxes. Depending on their circumstances, the survivors
may also want to pay the outstanding balances of mortgage and
loans.
First To Die Insurance: Insurance policy whose death
benefit is paid to the surviving insured upon the death of one
of the insured's. There is no longer a benefit once the benefit
is paid, however, the surviving insured usually has the option
of purchasing a policy of the same amount without providing
evidence of insurability.
Fixed Benefit: A death benefit, the dollar amount of
which does not vary.
Free Look: Provision required in most states whereby
policy owners have up to 20 days to
examine their new policies at no obligation.
Funeral Expenses: Expenses incurred for a funeral and
burial. These can include casket, vault, grave plot, headstone
and funeral director.
Grace Period: Period of time after the due date of a
premium during which the policy remains
in force without penalty.
Graded Premium Policy: A type of whole life policy
designed for people who want more life coverage than they can
currently afford. They pay a lower premium rate that increases
gradually over the first three to five years and then remains
constant over the life of the policy.
Guaranteed
Term:
A form of
renewable term insurance that remains in force as long as the
premiums are paid on time. With guaranteed term insurance, the
insurance company cannot terminate the policy during the term.
Guaranteed Insurability (Guaranteed Issue): Arrangement
usually provided by rider, whereby additional insurance may be
purchased at various times without evidence of insurability.
Incontestable Clause: A clause in a policy providing that
a policy has been in effect for a given length of time (two or
three years), the insurer shall not be able to contest the
statements contained in the application. In life policies, if an
insured lied as to the condition of his health at the time the
policy was taken out, that lie could not be used to contest
payment under the policy if death occurred after the time limit
stated in the incontestable clause.
In Force: Insurance on which the premiums are being paid
or have been fully paid.
Insurability: All conditions pertaining to individuals
that affect their health, susceptibility to injury and life
expectancy; an individual's risk profile.
Insurable Interest: Requirement of insurance contracts
that loss must be sustained by the applicant upon the death of
another and it must be sufficient to warrant compensation.
Insurance: A formal social device for reducing risk by
transferring the risks of several
individual entities to an insurer. The insurer agrees, for a
consideration, to pay for the loss in the amount specified in
the contract.
Insurance Policy: The printed form which serves as the
contract between an insurer and an
insured.
Insured: The party who is being insured. In life
insurance, it is the person because of his or her death the
insurance company would pay out a death benefit to a designated
beneficiary.
Insurer: Party that provides insurance coverage,
typically through a contract of insurance.
Irrevocable Beneficiary: A beneficiary that cannot be
changed without that beneficiary's consent.
Increasing Term Insurance: Term life insurance in which
the death benefit increases periodically over the policy's term.
Usually purchased as a cost of living rider to a whole life
policy.
Lapse: Termination of a policy upon the policy owner's
failure to pay the premium within the
grace period.
Level Term Insurance: Term coverage on which the face
value and premiums remain unchanged from the date the policy
comes into force to the date the policy expires.
Life Expectancy: The average number of years remaining
for a person of a given age to live as shown on the mortality or
annuity table used as a reference.
Life Insurance: An agreement that guarantees the payment
of a stated amount of monetary benefits upon the death of the
insured.
Limited Pay Policy: A type of whole life insurance
designed to let the policyholder pay higher premiums over a
specific period such as 10 or 20 years and then not pay any
premiums for the rest of his or her life.
Medical:
A document completed by a physician or another approved examiner
and submitted to an insurer to supply medical evidence of
insurability (or lack of insurability) or in relation to a
claim.
Medical Expenses: Reasonable charges for medical,
surgical, x-ray, dental, ambulance, hospital, professional
nursing, prosthetic devices, and funeral expenses. (The
insurance company defines what is reasonable.)
Misrepresentation: Act of making, issuing, circulating or
causing to be issued or circulated an estimate, an illustration,
a circular or a statement of any kind that does not represent
the correct policy terms, dividends or share of surplus or the
name or title for any policy or class of policies that does not
in fact reflect its true nature.
Modified Premium Policy: (See Graded Premium Policy)
Mortality Charge: The charge for the element of pure
insurance protection in a life insurance policy.
Mortality Cost: The first factor considered in life
insurance premium rates. Insurers have an idea of the
probability that any person will die at any particular age; this
is the information shown on a mortality table.
Mortality Rate: The number of deaths in a group of
people, usually expressed as deaths per thousand.
Mortality Table: A table showing the incidence of death
at specified ages.
Non medical Insurance: A contract of life insurance
underwritten on the basis of an insured's statement of his
health with no medical examination required.
Occupational Hazard: A condition in an occupation that
increases the peril of accident, sickness, or death. It usually
will mean higher premiums.
Offer and Acceptance: The offer may be made by the
applicant signing the application, paying the first premium and,
if necessary, submitting to physical examination. Policy
issuance, as applied for, constitutes acceptance by the company.
Or the offer may be made by the company when no premium payment
is submitted with the application. Premium payment on the
offered policy then constitutes acceptance by the applicant.
Original Age: The age you were when you bought the
policy.
Other Insured Rider: A term rider covering a family
member other than the insured that is attached to the base
policy covering the insured.
Ownership: All rights, benefits and privileges under life
insurance policies are controlled by
their owners. Policy owners may or may not be the insured.
Ownership may be assigned or
transferred by written request of current owner.
Para-Med (Paramedical) Examination: The medical
examination of an applicant for Life Insurance.
Para-Med (Paramedical): A physician, nurse, or para-med
appointed by the medical director of a life insurance company to
examine applicants.
Permanent Life Insurance: A term loosely applied to life
insurance policy forms other than
Group and Term, usually Cash Value Life Insurance, such as Whole
Life Insurance.
Policy: The printed document issued to the policyholder
by the company stating the terms of
the insurance contract.
Policy Holder:
The person who owns a life insurance policy. This is usually the
insured person, but it may also be a relative of the insured, a
partnership or a corporation.
Preferred Risk: A risk whose physical condition,
occupation, mode of living and other characteristics indicate a
prospect for longevity superior to that of the average longevity
of unimpaired lives of the same age.
Premium: The periodic payment required to keep an
insurance policy in force.
Premium Flexibility: The policy holder's right to vary
the amount of premium paid each
month towards a universal life policy.
Primary Beneficiary: In life insurance, the beneficiary
designated by the insured as the first to receive policy
benefits.
Primary Policy: The insurance policy that pays first when
you have a loss that's covered by
more than one policy.
Probate Costs: The legal fees and other costs incurred in
the probate process, which is the legal processing of your will.
Assets that you leave to other people through your will cannot
be distributed until the will is probated.
Provisions: Statements contained in an insurance policy
which explain the benefits, conditions and other features of the
insurance contract.
Rate: Coverage's issued at a higher rate than standard
because of some health condition, or impairment of the insured.
Re-entry Option: An option in a renewable term life
policy under which the policy owner is guaranteed, at the end of
the term, to be able to renew his or her coverage without
evidence of insurability, at a premium rate specified in the
policy.
Reinstatement: Putting a lapsed policy back in force by
producing satisfactory evidence of insurability and paying any
past-due premiums required.
Renewable: Term/Annual Renewable Term Term insurance that
may be renewed for another term without evidence of
insurability. Level term usually turns into renewable term with
increasing premiums after the level premium period.
Replacement: A new policy written to take the place of
one currently in force.
Representation: Statements made by applicants on their
applications for insurance that they represent as being
substantially true to the best of their knowledge and belief but
that are not warranted as exact in every detail.
Revocable Beneficiary: The beneficiary in a life
insurance policy in which the owner reserves
the right to revoke or change the beneficiary. Most policies are
written with a revocable
beneficiary.
Rider: An attachment to a policy that modifies its
conditions by expanding or restricting benefits or excluding
certain conditions from coverage.
Risk: The chance of injury, damage, or loss.
Risk Selection: The method a home office underwriter uses
to choose applicants that the insurance company will accept. The
underwriter must determine whether risks are standard,
substandard or preferred and set the premium rates accordingly.
Secondary
Beneficiary:
An alternate beneficiary designated to receive payment, usually
in the event the original beneficiary predeceases the insured.
Single Premium Policy: A whole life policy for people who
want to buy a policy for a one-time lump sum, and then be
covered for the rest of their lives without paying any
additional premiums.
Standard Risk: Person who, according to a company's
underwriting standards, is entitled to insurance protection
without extra rating or special restrictions.
Substandard Risk: Person who is considered an
under-average or impaired insurance risk because of physical
condition, family or personal history of disease, occupation,
residence in unhealthy climate or dangerous habits.
Term Insurance: Protection during limited number of
years; expiring without value if the
insured survives the stated period, which may be one or more
years but usually is five to twenty years, because such periods
usually cover the needs for temporary protection.
Term: Period for which the policy runs. In life
insurance, this is to the end of the term period for term
insurance.
Tertiary Beneficiary: In life insurance, a beneficiary
designated as third in line to receive the proceeds or benefits
if the primary and secondary beneficiaries do not survive the
insured.
Third-Party Owner: A policy owner who is not the
prospective insured. The policy owner and the insured may be,
and often are the same person. If for example, you apply for and
are issued an insurance policy on your life, then you are both
the policy owner and the insured and may be
known as the policy owner-insured. If, however, your mother
applies for and is issued a policy on
your life, then she is the policy owner and you are the insured.
Underwriter: Company receiving premiums and accepting
responsibility for fulfilling the policy contract. Also, company
employee who decides whether the company should assume a
particular risk; or the agent who sells the policy.
Uninsurable Risk: A person who is not acceptable for
insurance due to excessive risk.
Universal Life: An interest-sensitive life insurance
policy that builds cash values. The premium payer has control
over how the policy is structured. He has the flexibility to
eliminate the premiums (essentially pay up the policy and pay no
more premiums) or have the premiums continue for life. It is a
matter of juggling three variables: the assumed interest rate,
the cash value and the premium payment plan. The policy is
interest-sensitive, and if interest rates change from the
assumed interest, it will affect the other two variables. In the
past, many Universal Life Policies were structured assuming a
higher interest rate then was actually received, therefore, most
of them have under performed. If you have a Universal Life
Policy, you should have it evaluated to see if it needs
to have the premiums adjusted to get it back on track. A fourth
variable that has not been a factor but could be in the future,
and the owner should be aware of, is the Mortality variable.
Universal Life policies are usually structured assuming current
mortality rates. The insurance companies
reserve the right to change those rates.
Variable Life: Life insurance under which the benefits
relate to the value of assets behind the contract at the time
the benefit is paid. The assets fluctuate according to the
investment experience of funds managed by the life insurance
company. Premium payments may be fixed as to timing and amount
(scheduled premium variable life) or subject to change by the
policy holder (flexible premium variable life).
Waiver of Premium: Rider or provision included in most
life insurance policies exempting the insured from paying
premiums after he or she has been disabled for a specified
period of time, usually six months.
Whole Life Insurance: Life insurance that is kept in
force for a person's whole life as long as the scheduled
premiums are maintained. All Whole Life policies build up cash
values. Most Whole Life policies are guaranteed as long as the
scheduled premiums are maintained. The variable in a Whole life
Policy is the dividend which could vary depending on how well
the insurance is doing. If the company is doing well and the
policies are not experiencing a higher mortality than projected,
premiums are paid back to the policy holder in the form of
dividends. Policyholders can use the cash from dividends in many
ways. The three main uses are: it can be used to lower or vanish
premiums, it can be used to purchase more insurance or it can be
used to pay for term insurance. |