Premium Financed Life Insurance
A financing structure in which life insurance premiums are paid using borrowed funds secured by collateral and governed by lending and policy performance terms.
Definition
Premium financed life insurance is a structured arrangement in which a third-party lender provides funds to pay life insurance premiums on behalf of a policy owner, with the loan typically secured by the policy’s cash value and additional collateral. The borrower is obligated to repay the loan according to agreed terms, which may include interest-only payments during the financing period and eventual loan repayment through external assets, policy values, or death benefit proceeds. The structure integrates lending, insurance underwriting, and policy performance variables into a single financial mechanism.
Structural Components
- Life Insurance Policy: Typically a permanent policy capable of accumulating cash value.
- Lender Agreement: A contractual loan arrangement outlining interest, repayment terms, and collateral requirements.
- Collateral Stack: Includes policy cash value and may include external assets pledged to the lender.
- Interest Obligation: Loan interest may be fixed or variable and must be serviced according to agreement terms.
- Exit Strategy: Defined mechanism for loan repayment, such as policy performance, refinancing, or liquidation of assets.
Parameters & Conditions
- Requires borrower qualification based on financial strength and creditworthiness.
- Subject to underwriting standards for both the insurance policy and the lending institution.
- Dependent on policy performance assumptions, including cash value growth and crediting rates.
- Loan terms may include variable interest rates, creating exposure to rate changes.
- Collateral adequacy must be maintained throughout the financing period.
Topic Relationships
Exceptions, Limitations & Boundaries
- Not all life insurance policies are eligible for financing structures.
- Policy performance may not meet projected assumptions, affecting loan sustainability.
- Interest rate increases may materially change the economics of the arrangement.
- Collateral shortfalls may trigger additional funding requirements or loan restructuring.
- Loan default may result in policy surrender or collateral liquidation.