Indexed Universal Life Insurance in Texas
A defined form of permanent life insurance that credits policy value based on the performance of a referenced market index, subject to contractual limits and guarantees.
Definition
Indexed universal life insurance is a category of permanent life insurance in which policy cash value growth is determined by an interest crediting formula tied to an external financial index, while the policy itself does not directly participate in the market and retains insurer-defined floors, caps, and participation parameters.
Structural Components
- Permanent life insurance chassis with ongoing insurance charges
- Flexible premium framework within policy-defined limits
- Cash value accumulation mechanism linked to an external index
- Interest crediting strategies with caps, floors, or spreads
- Policy cost structure including mortality and expense charges
Parameters & Conditions
- Index performance influences credited interest but does not involve direct market ownership
- Crediting is subject to contractual limits such as caps or participation rates
- Policy values remain subject to insurance charges and administrative costs
- Policy performance depends on funding levels and policy design structure
- Regulated under Texas life insurance statutes and carrier filings
Topic Relationships
Exceptions, Limitations & Boundaries
Indexed universal life insurance does not involve direct equity ownership, does not guarantee index-level returns, and remains subject to insurer-declared crediting parameters and ongoing policy charges. Policy outcomes vary based on funding behavior, index crediting formulas, and long-term cost structures.