Glossary

Life insurance, in plain English.

Every term you'll encounter shopping for life insurance — defined by a licensed independent broker. 52 entries across 7 categories.

Coverage types

Term life insurance
Pure death-benefit coverage that lasts a fixed number of years (10, 15, 20, 25, 30). Cheapest type; pays only if you die during the term. No cash value.
Whole life insurance
Permanent coverage that lasts your entire life and builds tax-deferred cash value. Premiums are higher than term but level for life and the cash value can be borrowed against.
Universal life (UL)
Permanent coverage with flexible premiums and an interest-credited cash value. The premium and death benefit can be adjusted within limits.
Indexed universal life (IUL)
A UL variant where cash value growth is tied to a stock-market index (typically S&P 500) with a floor (often 0%) and a cap. More upside than fixed UL, more complexity.
Variable universal life (VUL)
A UL variant where cash value is invested in sub-accounts (similar to mutual funds). Highest upside, highest downside risk — the cash value can lose money.
No-exam (simplified-issue) life insurance
A policy issued without a paramedical exam. Usually approved or denied within minutes based on questionnaire + database checks. Slightly higher premiums; lower face amounts (usually ≤ $500K).
Guaranteed-issue life insurance
Coverage with no health questions and no exam — guaranteed acceptance up to a low face amount (usually ≤ $25K) for older applicants. Highest cost per $1K of coverage; usually has a 2-year graded death benefit.
Final expense insurance
Small whole life or guaranteed-issue policies designed to cover funeral and burial costs. Typically $5K–$25K face amounts.
Mortgage protection insurance
Term life insurance specifically sized to pay off your mortgage. Sometimes sold as a decreasing-term policy where the face amount drops alongside the mortgage balance.

Veteran-specific

VGLI (Veterans' Group Life Insurance)
Federal program that lets you continue SGLI coverage after separating from active duty, up to $500K. No medical underwriting if elected within 240 days of separation; premiums increase with age.
SGLI (Servicemembers' Group Life Insurance)
Active-duty group term life insurance, up to $500K, automatic at coverage start. Costs $0.06 per $1K of coverage. Ends with separation from service.
S-DVI (Service-Disabled Veterans Insurance)
VA program for veterans rated for service-connected disabilities, providing limited coverage (typically $10K). Replaced by VALife in 2023.
VALife
VA life insurance program (replaces S-DVI as of January 2023) — guaranteed-issue whole life up to $40K for veterans rated for service-connected disabilities.
TSGLI (Traumatic SGLI)
SGLI rider that pays a lump sum if a service member suffers a covered traumatic injury. Not a death benefit.

Underwriting

Underwriting
The carrier's process of evaluating your application — health, lifestyle, finances — to decide whether to issue a policy and at what premium.
Preferred Plus / Preferred Best
The lowest-cost rate class, reserved for the healthiest applicants (low BMI, no nicotine, no family-history red flags, optimal labs).
Preferred
Second-best rate class — very healthy but with one or two minor factors that prevent Preferred Plus.
Standard Plus / Standard Non-Smoker
Average-health rate class — most applicants land here or close to it.
Substandard / Table-rated
Above-standard premium because of a health condition. Tables are usually labeled 1–10 (or A–J), each adding ~25% to the standard premium.
Paramedical exam
30-minute home or office visit by a contract nurse: height, weight, blood pressure, blood draw, urine sample, sometimes EKG. Used by carriers for fully underwritten policies.
Accelerated underwriting
Underwriting that uses electronic data sources (Rx history, MIB, MVR, health records) instead of a paramedical exam. Faster decision; usually capped at certain face amounts and ages.
Medical Information Bureau (MIB)
Industry data clearinghouse where carriers report and check application history. Helps detect non-disclosure across applications to multiple carriers.
Attending Physician Statement (APS)
Formal record request from your doctor's office for medical history. Common when the application discloses a meaningful medical condition.

Policy mechanics

Face amount (or face value)
The death benefit — the amount the policy pays to beneficiaries when the insured dies.
Beneficiary (primary / contingent)
Person(s) or entity (trust, charity) you name to receive the death benefit. Primary gets paid first; contingent gets paid only if primary is deceased or unavailable.
Premium
What you pay (monthly, quarterly, annually) to keep the policy in force.
Cash value
The savings component inside permanent (whole, UL, IUL, VUL) policies. Grows tax-deferred; can be borrowed against.
Surrender value
Cash value minus surrender charges — what you actually receive if you cancel a permanent policy in its early years.
Free look period
Typically 10–30 days after policy delivery during which you can cancel for a full refund. Required by state law.
Contestability period
Usually the first 2 years of a policy. Carrier can rescind for material misrepresentation on the application.
Suicide clause
Standard 2-year exclusion for death by suicide. After 2 years, suicide is fully covered.
Lapse
Policy termination because premiums weren't paid. Most policies have a 30–60-day grace period before official lapse.
Reinstatement
Putting a lapsed policy back in force, typically requires back premiums + interest + new evidence of insurability.

Riders

Rider
An add-on to a base policy that modifies its terms — additional benefits or restrictions.
Accelerated death benefit (ADB) rider
Lets you access part of the death benefit early if diagnosed with a terminal illness. Usually free.
Chronic illness rider
Lets you access part of the death benefit early if you can't perform 2 of 6 activities of daily living. Sometimes called a long-term care accelerator.
Critical illness rider
Pays a portion of the death benefit upon diagnosis of a covered critical illness (cancer, heart attack, stroke).
Waiver of premium rider
Waives your premiums if you become disabled and can't work.
Return of premium (ROP) rider
Term life rider — if you outlive the term, the carrier returns your premiums (no interest). Significantly raises premium cost.
Child rider
Adds a small term-life benefit on each of your children for one flat fee. Often convertible to permanent at age 25 without underwriting.
Conversion option
Term-life feature that lets you convert to permanent coverage with the same carrier without new underwriting. Window is typically 10 years or to age 65–75.

Tax & estate

1035 exchange
Tax-free exchange of one life insurance or annuity policy for another (similar to a 1031 in real estate). Lets you upgrade carriers or products without triggering tax.
Modified Endowment Contract (MEC)
A permanent policy funded too quickly under IRS rules. Loses some tax advantages — withdrawals taxed as income before basis. Avoid unintentional MEC status.
Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT)
Trust that owns the policy so the death benefit is outside your estate for federal estate-tax purposes. Used by high-net-worth households.
Estate-tax exemption
Federal threshold above which estates owe estate tax (currently ~$13M per person, scheduled to drop in 2026). Life insurance death benefits paid to a non-spouse beneficiary are tax-free income but are included in your estate unless held in an ILIT.

Industry & regulatory

NAIC
National Association of Insurance Commissioners — the standard-setting body for state insurance regulators.
NPN (National Producer Number)
Unique national ID for licensed insurance agents. Use it to verify any agent's credentials at niprfintech.com.
Captive agent
An agent who can only sell one carrier's products (e.g., a State Farm or Northwestern Mutual agent).
Independent broker
An agent appointed with multiple carriers who can quote and place business with whichever fits the client best. We're an independent brokerage.
Replacement form
Required disclosure when a new policy replaces an existing one. Carriers track replacements to discourage churning.
AM Best rating
A.M. Best Company's rating of an insurer's financial strength. A++ is the highest, A- is generally the floor for major-carrier appetite. Use as a baseline for who'll be around to pay your claim in 30 years.
Comdex score
Composite score (0–100) averaging financial-strength ratings from AM Best, Moody's, S&P, and Fitch. Quick comparable across carriers.

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