2016-04-12

How To Avoid The Salesman’s Hype And Focus On What’s Best For You

Key Ideas

Why life insurance is a negative expectancy bet for the majority of consumers

The problem with mixing investing with life insurance

4 concerns you should have about whole life insurance

7 basic terms and features of whole life insurance you need to know

Why you may not benefit from compound interest with whole life insurance

The hidden consequences behind tax-free whole life insurance loans

4 common, persuasive arguments from whole life salesmen and why they’re wrong

What’s the most popular type of life insurance sold in the U.S.?

If you guessed term life insurance, you’d be wrong.

Despite the well-established conventional wisdom that you should “buy term and invest the difference,” the reality is whole life insurance sells the doors off term. The numbers aren’t even close.

According to the American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI), in 2014, 63.7% of all individual policies sold in the U.S. were whole life, compared to just 36.3% of policies being some type of term coverage.

This fact is even more disturbing because you’d be hard-pressed to find anything positive written about whole life insurance unless you happen to prowl insurance agent or insurance company sites that profit from selling that type of policy to you.

And yet 63.7% of all policies sold are whole life. Amazing!

This article will give you a deep understanding of whole life insurance – its benefits, pros & cons, tax treatment, and use for retirement income – so that you can decide for yourself what best fits your situation.

You’ll get everything you need to combat the insurance salesman’s hype so you can make a smart decision, independent of their influence, as to which type of life insurance is best for you.

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Whole Life Insurance – The 30 Second Elevator Speech

The writer in me is always impressed with the salesman’s pitch and how they manage to frame their product in the most favorable light.

It’s an art form, so let’s consider the typical pitch for whole life insurance before dissecting it.

You can “contribute” as much premium as you like (not subject to limits like an IRA or 401k), so there’s no limit on your tax-deferred growth.

Your policy has a built in “cash value” account, where you’ll enjoy a guaranteed minimum interest return, tax-deferred growth, and tax-free access to your funds via policy loans.

What’s more, should you die while you hold this account, your policy value will blossom into a much larger cash benefit, which your beneficiaries will receive without paying any income tax.

Not a bad pitch, eh? Now you know why it sells so well.

Entire books have been written indoctrinating laymen about how whole life insurance is the perfect vehicle for tax-free accumulation and distribution of retirement income.

But if there’s one lesson you should take from my writings, it’s that the world of personal finance is rarely so simple. Whenever a salesman gives you an over-simplified, glowing analysis, it should always serve as a warning flag that you need to dig deeper and uncover the whole truth.

Life Insurance Common Sense Test

Before we analyze whole life insurance in depth, we must first set a framework for the arguments so we’re grounded in obvious business truths.

The reason this is essential is because, I have to warn you, this is going to get complicated. The insurance companies designed it this way to help sell their products (I’ll explain this below).

If you’re not thoroughly grounded in inviolable, mathematical truths, then you can easily get distracted and swayed by their persuasive arguments.

The essence of life insurance is you give the company your money in the form of policy premiums and they give you back a package of benefits in exchange.

The value of those benefits, on average, must be less than the value of the policy premiums you paid, after factoring in the time value and investment return on the money, in order for the insurance company to profit and pay salesmen commissions.

In simple language, that means that on average, the general population would be better off independently investing the money, rather than giving it to the insurance company and having them invest it in exchange for a contractual package of benefits.

Or stated even more simply, the contracted benefits package offered by the policy must, on average, have a lower value than the money you pay to the insurance company for those benefits.

If this weren’t true, then the actuaries designing these complicated investment contracts would get fired, and the insurance company would lose money and eventually go out of business.

This isn’t some conspiracy theory. It’s just irrefutable business common sense. It’s inviolable math.

On average the general population should independently invest their money rather than buy whole life insurance
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Let me be clear that this inviolable math doesn’t mean that you can’t win with life insurance. You absolutely, positively can win.

Insurance is an actuarial process where the minority can win and the majority must lose in order to pay the salesman’s commission and leave a profit for the insurance company.

Okay, now that you have the basic life insurance business equation down, defining it as a negative expectancy bet, on average, for all policy holders, where some will win and the majority must lose, we must add an additional layer of complication to deal with investment products wrapped inside life insurance.

When investments are involved, the benchmark for judging whether the product is beneficial or not rises to the level of competing investment returns, since that’s the alternative you would invest your money in if life insurance wasn’t there.

In other words, you really have two things going on when analyzing the life insurance purchase decision.

You’ve got life insurance in its simplest and most traditional form – a risk management tool – where you pay the company to provide a benefit to support your dependents (or achieve other financial objectives) in exchange for a defined cost should you meet an untimely demise.

This cost is a known, negative expectancy bet that you hope you lose on by living a full and long life. It’s similar to homeowners insurance and liability insurance, where you transfer risks you can’t afford to accept to an insurance company in exchange for a fee. The insurance company then earns a fair business profit for providing this valuable risk management service. Examples include term life insurance and guaranteed universal life.

However, combining life insurance contracts with investment contracts, like with whole life insurance, is a different animal entirely.

The problem is the insurance company invests the capital you send them in the same stuff you and I can invest in on our own – stocks, bonds, real estate. They have large pools of capital and earn market based returns because they are the market. The only problem is they stand in the middle collecting fees and paying commission which means the net return to you as a policyholder must be less than competing low cost alternatives. The high fees and commissions virtually assure this.

That means, by definition, their investment products are at a competitive disadvantage to conventional investments with lower cost structure and less commissions.

Numerous research studies have proven that cost is top indicator of long term investment outperformance relative to the averages, and life insurance companies are at a competitive disadvantage on costs, which places them at a competitive disadvantage for selling their wares based on investment return.

Are there exceptions? Yes, but that doesn’t change the math, that on average, this must be true for the majority. Remember, insurance is always an actuarial process where exceptions will exist, but the majority defines the rule. It’s the nature of the beast.

So how do the insurance companies compete in the investment arena when they’re at an inherent investment return disadvantage due to costs?

The solution is genius.

They roll out a litany of incredibly complicated investment products with incredibly complicated benefits so that even the experts can’t agree on what’s best or even how to analyze them. The insurance company obfuscates the truth through complication.

The game is simple. Professional actuaries who live and breathe this stuff full time create packages of benefits associated with complicated rule sets.

The package of benefits is used to sell the policy to the consumer, and the complicated rule set is used to ensure that the policy is a negative expectancy bet for the majority of consumers (net of competing, low cost investment returns), resulting in a profit for the insurance company.

Life insurance packages are a negative expectancy bet for most consumers
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Whenever you meet a complicated investment, always know one thing with absolute certainty: the complication doesn’t exist without a reason.

Each term changes the mathematical expectancy of the investment, and I guarantee it doesn’t change it in your favor. When it comes to life insurance as an investment, always know that the devil is in all those complicated details and fine print that you don’t understand (but they do).

The investment rule this violates is you should never invest in anything you don’t fully understand because that means you can’t define the expectancy of your investment. Life insurance investment contracts are so complicated that even the experts disagree. It’s fraught with controversy.

The key point to carry throughout the rest of the analysis in this article is that there’s two things going on here:

Traditional life insurance, which is simple to understand, is a known negative expectancy bet that’s totally acceptable because you’re paying for the privilege of transferring risk you can’t afford to accept. It’s very similar to liability insurance and homeowners insurance. You buy it hoping you lose, and that’s okay.

Life insurance as an investment product is very different. It’s so complicated and filled with so many rules, each of which changes the expectancy of the bet, that advanced expertise beyond the capability of most consumers it’s sold to is required to sort it out.

This gives us two simple rules that we’ll carry throughout the following analysis:

Traditional life insurance (examples include Term and Guaranteed Universal Life) is a wise purchase when the death benefit and risk transfer are justified by the price.

Investment products wrapped inside a life insurance policy (Whole Life) can be a wise purchase when the ancillary benefits (tax advantages, asset protection, employee retention, etc., etc.) are justified by the price.

In other words, savvy consumers are not buying life insurance investment products for their investment value. Instead, consumers are accepting the negative expectancy (on average) against competing alternatives for your capital in exchange for an ancillary benefit built into the contract that they value enough to justify the cost.

As a consumer, you must always know that every policy is designed by the company to be a negative expectancy bet for the majority of the purchasers, and positive expectancy bet for the insurance company.

You are buying something designed to make you lose money relative to investment alternatives, so have your eyes wide open and do your due diligence.

This is not a conspiracy theory. It’s just business. It’s baked into the cake by inviolable math.

It doesn’t make life insurance bad. It just means you have to really know what you’re doing.

Do your due diligence when buying life insurance as it's something designed to make you lose money
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The Other Side Of Whole Life Insurance That The Salesman Didn’t Tell You

With that framework in place, let’s now look at some of the complicated details left out of the salesman’s persuasive arguments above that change the expectancy of the investment…

When you buy whole life insurance, you become contractually obligated to make contributions every year, and cannot waiver.

If you miss a contribution, the rest of your account value is penalized. If you take money out of your investment, you have to pay it back plus interest, and if you don’t pay it back, you could be in jeopardy of losing all of your investment.

You won’t break even on your investment for the first 10 years because of all the costs and fees associated with your investment, and for the same reason, you’ll probably earn significantly less than competing investments over the long term.

Don't mix investing with life insurance. You won't break even for the first 10 years due to fees
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Doesn’t sound quite as alluring, eh? But wait, it gets better…

When structured properly, most “distributions” you’ll take (including gains), are tax free.

However, if you ever decide to cancel your account, withdraw 100% of the funds, or even need access to more money than you had anticipated, you could have to pay income tax on all the “tax free” gains you’ve ever taken from the investment.

Lastly, if you die with funds in your account, the company keeps your investment.

This, in a nutshell, is the dark side of whole life insurance the salesman doesn’t reveal. As I said, the devil is in the details, and each detail was created by the insurance company actuary with the sole purpose of managing the expectancy of the contract.

On top of that, some additional concerns you should have about whole life insurance include:

It’s confusing – not just for the average Joe consumer, but for anyone who doesn’t live and breathe life insurance. Heck, even the people who live and breathe life insurance disagree about the stuff in this article.

It’s expensive (as a pure lifetime insurance coverage play, it usually costs 2-3x as much as guaranteed universal life).

The tax and liquidity benefits are often grossly overstated.

And it offers a lower rate of investment return than competing investments.

Whole life insurance is confusing, expensive, and has lower investment returns
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With that said, there are extremely rare instances where whole life insurance makes good business sense for the consumer. It’s not always bad because remember from earlier, it’s an actuarial outcome where the minority can win but the majority must lose to pay the salesman’s commission and still provide profit to the insurance company.

However, most insurance experts (except, of course, the whole life salesman) will generally agree that if you have a whole life policy (and are healthy), you should consider the possibility of transferring the cash value into a lower cost, lifetime guaranteed coverage plan, such as a guaranteed universal life insurance contract.

It costs you nothing to look carefully at the numbers to see if it makes sense for you.

If you have a whole life policy (and are healthy) then consider switching to a guaranteed universal life contract to see what it would save you. It costs you nothing to get the numbers and learn the facts. Full disclosure: this is an affiliate relationship so I get compensated if you buy, but this relationship is also why they’ll help analyze your situation without pushing or pitching. Check it out…

Whole Life Insurance – First, the Basics

The key difference between term life insurance and whole life insurance is term offers low cost protection with guaranteed level premiums for a fixed duration, typically 10, 15, 20, or 30 years; whereas whole life insurance offers lifetime guaranteed coverage with the additional benefit of accumulating cash values.

In other words, whole life is a mix of investment and life insurance, and that’s what causes all the complication. Because it’s an investment product it’s held to a whole different standard. It must provide positive expectancy, and it must outperform competing investment products if your objective is investment return.

The other problem with mixing the investment product with life insurance is the complexity. Just look at this list of whole life insurance features:

With term life insurance, you have a known negative expectancy. With whole life, it's a different story
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Basic whole life insurance features:

Fixed Level Premiums – Premiums are guaranteed to stay level for life, or you can schedule the premiums to be “paid up” by a certain age, such as 65. If you miss a payment, cost of insurance is deducted from your cash value, and if you don’t make up the payment, that can lead to a reduced death benefit.

Lifetime Guaranteed Face Value – The benefit amount is fixed for life. It cannot decrease as long as the owner continues to make timely premium payments.

Cash Value Account – Besides the life insurance component, whole life policies contain a cash value account associated with the policy, from which fees and cost of insurance are paid. The cash value account typically earns a minimum, guaranteed interest and accumulates tax free.

Tax-Free Access to Funds – Whole life cash withdrawals are tax free until you reach the cost basis, as withdrawals are treated with FIFO (first in – first out) accounting rules. Most people, however, borrow from their policy cash values to keep their cash value account in tact and earning interest, but are charged interest on policy loans until the loan is paid back, similar to how a home equity line of credit works.

Dividends – Most insurance carriers pay dividends to their policy holders. Owners can take these dividends as cash, apply the dividends to pay down their premiums, or have them purchase “paid-up additions,” which essentially buys them additional life insurance, pushing up their cash value and death benefit. Dividends are not guaranteed, but most companies pay them every year without fail.

Commissions – Life insurance agents earn commissions based on the premium paid into a policy, typically between 80% to 100% of the first year’s premium. Therefore, most or all of a whole life policy’s first year’s premium gets paid to the salesperson, which also helps explain why it can take 10 years or more for your investment to break even.

Surrender Fees – To manage the risk of paying the first year’s premium to the salesperson, most companies add a 15 year surrender fee schedule to their policies to ensure they earn back that commission, one way or another. If a policy holder cancels the policy during the first year, he would typically not expect to get back “any” of his cash value.  The penalty decreases each year thereafter.

Paid-Up Additions (PAU) – If you buy whole life from a “mutual” company who pays dividends, one of your dividend options is to purchase additional, single premium bits of additional life insurance.  This is called paid-up additions, and serves to increase your death benefit (with no qualification or medical exam) and since most of the premium (approximately 90%) is funneled to your cash value, it is the fastest way to increase your cash value.  Some policies also have an option (or rider) where you allocate some of your premium to purchasing paid-up additions.  It’s common to see individuals allocating 70-75% of their premiums to the base policy and 25-30% to PAU.  The advantage in doing so is faster cash accumulation.  The disadvantage is you’ll have a lower death benefit, as single premium paid-up additions coverage costs more than the standard whole life coverage.

Whew! Can you already see what I mean about complication? And trust me, we’re just getting warmed up on this front.

But at least, for now, you have the basic terms and features of whole life insurance.

Get familiar with the basic terms and features of whole life insurance before you invest in it
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You also understand the general framework of expectancy analysis as applied to life insurance and the actuarial reality of how the minority can win but the majority must lose relative to competing investment products. Finally, you understand how complicated features and rules are used to change the expectancy of the investment as demonstrated already just by this partial features list.

So now, you’re armed with all the tools you need to take the discussion a cut deeper by analyzing the inner complexity underlying whole life insurance.

My objective is to give you a deeper understanding behind many of the insurance agent’s claims that drive whole life to dominate the life insurance sales charts so that you have a balanced perspective and can make a smart financial decision.

We’ll start with fixed level premiums…

Fixed Level Premiums (aka Forced Contributions)

Let’s assume you contribute $1,000 per month into your 401K as part of your wealth plan. But then life changes and you hit a roadblock.

Perhaps you lose your job or need to provide financial assistance to a family member, and you stop making your automatic contribution for a while.

If you’re contributing to a 401k, it’s no problem. You can always stop your automatic contributions for a while until your financial situation stabilizes. You own the asset, and you’re in control.

With whole life insurance, however, that’s a big problem, especially during the first 15 years of the policy while cash values are low and aren’t earning much interest yet.

Remember, this isn’t a straightforward asset you own. Instead, it’s a contractual obligation with an insurance company on the other side.

You must understand that when you stop making premium payments to your life insurance company, they don’t stop charging you for the cost of insurance and other fees, which eats away at the cash value you’ve accumulated, and could put all the premiums (contributions) you’ve paid into the policy at risk.

Can you imagine an investment that forces you to make payments or your initial investment is at jeopardy?

Welcome to whole life insurance! Remember, it’s a contractual agreement, so the terms are whatever is defined in the contract.

Did you know that whole life insurance forces you to make payments? There are serious downsides to missing one
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And since whole life is so expensive, typically 10-20x the price of term life insurance, a lot of people can’t afford to keep their policies through all of life’s ups and downs, and are forced to let them lapse.

In fact, the Society of Actuaries conducts an annual persistency report, and the most recent one shows that:

12% of individual whole life policies lapse during the first year,

10% lapse in the 2nd year,

8% in the 3rd year,

6% in years 4-5,

And finally drops to 4% in years 11-20, and 3.5% in years 21+.

That’s a lot of people surrendering their policies, and they’re often hit with a hefty surrender penalty, getting back a fraction of what they originally paid into their policy.

Surrender penalties are meant to discourage policyholders from directing their funds into another investment. For that reason, it’s very important that you read the fine print on any whole life insurance policy that you might be considering so you know what you’re getting yourself into for the long term.

The key point to take away is that whole life can only work if you consistently pay your premiums for a very long time.

That’s a serious potential problem because everybody has ups and downs and goes through unexpected setbacks. Any financial strategy that doesn’t allow for “life” to happen, but in fact penalizes you when it does, is not representing the best interests of the consumer.

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Rate of Return – “Hidden” Charges and Overstated Tax Benefits

Another challenge with whole life insurance is deciphering the real rate of investment return.

While policy costs are disclosed if you look hard enough, few readers have sufficient financial math skills to convert those data disclosures into accurate investment return figures (expectancy).

I know this from my coaching experience because whenever I ask a client (many are very sophisticated) what interest they earn on their whole life policy, they’ll tell me the “headline” figure. Unfortunately, it’s not that simple.

For example, let’s imagine a fictitious 68 year old female client named Ashley with a $250,000 whole life policy, just so we can quote real numbers.

She would probably tell me something like, “Todd, I make a guaranteed interest rate of 2.5%, but that’s the worst case scenario. It actually earns more like 4.75%.”



Let’s see if she’s right…

We’ll start the analysis in the guaranteed values column on the left side of the table above, where the illustration shows a 2.5% guaranteed interest rate.

Take special note of the Premium Outlay and Cash Value columns.

Nobody needs to pull out a financial calculator to figure out that the owner isn’t quite making 2.5% on her money.

She has paid over $21,000 per year for 5 years, (that’s well over $100,000), and the guaranteed cash value in year 5 is only $79,556.

The same is true for the “Non-guaranteed” column.

A $21,848 contribution over 5 years at 4.75% interest should result in an end value of $120,123. So that column doesn’t quite add up, either.

So obviously there are charges here that are being taken from the policy.

Are they hidden? No. They are stated in the illustration, but the point is, people don’t notice them.

These fees include:

Commissions

Cost of insurance/mortality fees

Policy fees

Administrative fees

And in the first 15 years, typically, surrender charges

Here’s a personal account from Matt Becker of MomAndDadMoney.com:

“With that said, there is actually a small guaranteed return on these policies, but even this is incredibly misleading. In the policy that was attempted to be sold to me, the “guaranteed return” was stated as 4%. But when I actually ran the numbers, using their own growth chart for the guaranteed portion of my cash value, after 40 years the annual return only amounted to 0.74% … The reality is that you can get better guaranteed returns from a CD that locks up your money for a shorter period of time and is FDIC insured.”

The reality is expenses matter, a lot! Let’s explore this further…

Do you know how many fees you're getting charged for whole life insurance? A lot!
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Whole Life – The Expensive Sister of Mutual Funds

Just to be clear, the life insurance industry is no more deceptive at reporting their numbers than any other financial industry.

You must be a smart consumer and look closely at the details to get the truth, because numbers can be used to deceive if you don’t understand them.

For example, mutual fund companies and other investment firms frequently report average returns rather than compound returns. The reason is simple: average return is always higher than compound return, so it makes the investment look more desirable.

The reality is compound return is the only number you can actually spend, thus it’s the only number that actually matters to an investor. Average return is a statistical fiction that doesn’t exist in your account because your money compounds, it doesn’t average.

The same is true with mutual fund expenses and 12b-1 fees. They are disclosed to you in unreadable documents filled with legalese so everything is above board.

However, they never show you the paper trail by providing the exact figures for how much you personally spent on those expenses and fees, and how much lower your account value is as a result.

Most mutual fund investors would be shocked to know that if they earned 8% in their mutual fund, the actual underlying portfolio they’re invested in might have made 10-11% during the same period.

It's important to read the fine print with any financial product, especially whole life insurance
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So where did the other 2-3% go? It’s hidden in the detailed expenses that were fully disclosed to you, even though you can’t figure out how to find the actual money lost.

Again, this is not some grand conspiracy theory. It’s how the financial industry works, and it’s all fully disclosed in the prospectus (contractual documents).

The problem is consumers (you) rarely know about or understand how to interpret the details of these documents, and even if you know what’s disclosed, it’s very difficult to translate back into tangible dollars and cents.

The game the pros play is to make the investment complicated, and then layer in expenses in disclosure documents that are difficult to figure out.

Complication alone is not necessarily bad, but it usually accompanies high expenses, which means it violates two fundamental investment tenets:

Don’t invest in anything you don’t fully understand. If you don’t fully understand it, then you can’t possibly know the expectancy of the investment.

Below average expenses are associated with above average returns. It’s only acceptable to incur investment expenses when they put more money in your pocket than they take out.

Expenses matter.

Small amounts compound over many years to become large amounts. Insurance actuaries are pros at figuring this stuff out and using that knowledge to structure policies that profit at your expense.

Never invest in something you don't understand - you won't know the expectancy of it
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The bottom line is you want to pay attention to expenses and fees for all your investments, including your life insurance.

And you should never invest in something you don’t fully understand because you should only put capital at risk on positive expectancy bets. If you don’t understand it, then you can’t figure out the expectancy.

For a free quote on the lowest cost, best value life insurance products (without sales pressure) contact my hand-picked sales team. They can shop 40 top carriers because they’re independent so they can deliver the policy representing the best value for you.

The Problem of Compound Interest

Staying with our compound interest reasoning, it’s also worth noting that one of the reasons for the meager returns in whole life is what happens during the first 10 years of the policy… minimal to no gains.

The problem with the math of compound returns is low returns in the early period are very difficult to overcome over the long term. You have to earn extraordinary returns in later years to result in an average compound return.

Again, this is all just the way the math works. It’s not an opinion. It’s inviolable math.

Unfortunately, whole life insurance wastes those first 10 years of compound growth. In fact, it’s the rarest of policies that will break even in the first 10 years.

That’s because the first 10 years are front loaded with heavy fees and expenses, causing you to lose valuable compound return time.

The power of compound returns is lessened when gains are minimal in the first 10 years
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Whole Life Insurance Taxation – Are Withdrawals/Loans Really Tax Free?

Now let’s turn our attention to all the tax benefit claims of whole life insurance.

This is actually a valid return stream. Insurance companies have lobbied heavily to be the beneficiary of this government sanctioned investment return stream – tax advantages – so they can turn around and sell those tax advantages to you for a profit.

But again, the devil for determining the positive expectancy from tax benefits is in the details (read “complication”).

There are 4 essential phases to every investment that must be considered when talking about tax advantages:

Contribution phase

Accumulation phase

Distribution phase

and Transfer phase

For example, a typical 401k enjoys tax favored treatment in the contribution and accumulation phases, but can incur income tax liability in the distribution and transfer phases.

Whole life proponents like to argue that you get tax favored treatment in 3 of the 4 phases:

Contribution phase

Accumulation phase – cash value grows tax deferred in life insurance contracts

Distribution phase – when it’s time for you to take money from your policy, you can borrow “tax free” from your cash value

And Transfer phase – when you die, your policy benefit is transferred to your beneficiary(ies) income tax free.

(The really aggressive whole life proponents even go so far as to argue you can get tax favored treatment in the Contribution phase if you pull equity from your home to pay your life insurance premiums. The reasoning is your mortgage interest deduction provides a tax favored contribution. This is a highly aggressive strategy that puts your home at risk, so I would never encourage it.)

While the claims are technically correct, the devil is in the details (gee, have I said that before…?).

Let’s examine these details by starting with liquidity issues…

Before Taxation – A Word about Liquidity

Life insurance salespeople love to point out the liquidity of whole life.

They will boast that:

You can access funds via policy loans, and you don’t have to pay it back.

Life insurance loans are a great place to turn for emergency funds, or even business loans, because the money belongs to the owner so there’s no “qualification” needed for the loan.

And finally, loans are not subject to 10% early withdrawal penalties for taking funds prior to age 59 ½, as they are with IRA’s and SEP’s.

Agents will argue these benefits make life insurance an excellent source of lendable money at your convenience.

However, it’s not quite that simple. The problem lies in what happens to the policy once you borrow funds from it.

Think twice about borrowing funds from your whole life insurance policy. There are major downsides
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First of all, during the first 5-10 years of the policy, it simply cannot sustain withdrawals/loans.  Yes, you can access the funds, but you’ll be charged interest and have to pay it back.

If you can’t pay it back, and you stop making premium payments, then any other cash value you have in the policy will begin to get eaten up by loan interest and cost of insurance.

Think about the illogic of the claims – most policies don’t have any gains for at least 10 years, so what’s the benefit of being able to withdraw money on FIFO tax status or borrow from your policy tax free if there are no gains to borrow?

What’s the benefit of getting to your money without an IRS early distribution fee of 10% if there are no gains?

Rather than pay all those premiums to the life insurance company, you could just stuff it all under your mattress and have instant access with no IRS penalty. It makes no sense if that’s really your goal.

Why would you want to use whole life insurance and have to wait roughly 15 years before you have any gains worth talking about? How’s that an advantage?

15 Years Later… Tax-Free, Liquid Access to Money, Finally! (Or is It?)

So when can we actually pull money out of a whole life policy and get this sacred tax-free income that insurance salespeople love to talk about?

Let’s say you’ve spent 15 to 20 years diligently paying your mandatory premiums, building up your cash value, and now you need some money…

There are 2 ways to pull money out of a whole life account:

You can take a withdrawal (as mentioned earlier, in which case you’ll only pay taxes on gains after you’ve taken more than your cost basis)

Or you can borrow from your cash value. Many owners withdraw funds up to their cost basis, to avoid taxation and loan fees, and then switch to loans.

In the first instance, there’s nothing impressive or unique about policy withdrawals. You’re merely withdrawing your cost basis, thus not incurring any tax since it was your money anyway. This isn’t some great benefit you should get excited about.

However, the almighty whole life insurance policy loan is different. This is the feature that salesmen get excited to pitch as the great secret to investment income.

The 'tax advantages' of whole life insurance aren't as great as they're made out to be
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For example, let’s say you need some money to start a business or supplement your retirement. The good news is you can easily request a policy loan from your life insurance provider.

If you request a check, most companies will send it out within 2 weeks. (Although if you read the fine print, most carriers reserve the right to hold withdrawal or loan requests for up to 6 months before they pay.)

What’s really cool about this loan is that it’s low-hassle, you can usually get the money quickly, and your insurance carrier won’t be sending you a 1099 for taxable income received, as long as your loan amount doesn’t exceed your cost basis. That’s all fine and good.

So you’re happy to get your tax-free loan, but what’s happened to your policy?

Generally, policy loans reduce the policy death benefit.

Generally, your loan is accruing interest. You need to pay it back (plus the interest), or risk a reduced death benefit or even policy lapse (see #4).

Your policy loan generally decreases your cash surrender value.

When the loan balance exceeds your cash value, your premiums may increase to maintain the same death benefit. If you can’t pay the increase, your policy could lapse.

If your policy lapses, 100% of all “tax free” monies ever taken are taxed as ordinary income.

None of this is necessarily bad for you unless your specific actions and situation make it a problem.

Learn the 5 possible consequences of taking a tax-free loan from your whole life insurance policy
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If you’ve accumulated a lot of interest and dividends, then your policy may have grown to the point that it can support the ongoing cost of insurance, and it might even support a 4% spend rule.

If you haven’t, then you could have a problem.

Again, notice the level of complication hiding all the fees and expenses. Think about how each rule impacts the expectancy of the investment. It’s so difficult to sort all this out that even the experts disagree.

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The Death of a Whole Life Policy and Its Tax Benefits

The next issue we run into is the difference between theory and reality.

Whole life insurance salespeople pitch you the policy based on illustrations and tables that assume you withdraw or borrow from the policy according to perfectly designed plans.

Again, life happens, and the policyholder may need money earlier than expected, or more than expected.

One of the points I make in my book about the 4% Rule and Safe Withdrawal Rates In Retirement is that we have no idea what inflation will be like 20-30 years down the line, or life expectancies, or interest rates.

The future is unknowable.

But if you look at the whole life illustrations provided during the sales pitch, it shows a perfect pattern of premium payments for X number of years, and then shows a perfect distribution pattern with the exact same amount taken each year.

Take, for example, this sample whole life illustration for a 40 year old male, who pays $5,225 per year for a $250,000 policy.

The illustration shows 25 years of premium payments, and then shows him pulling out policy loans of $8,313 per year to age 100.

… so he pays his premium every year without fail, and then pulls out the exact amount for the rest of his life.

At first glance, it doesn’t look too bad. The policy seems to support an $8,313 per year loan amount for life off of a cash surrender value of $213,098. That’s almost 4%, and since it’s tax free money, it’s even more valuable, right?!

But do you see a problem here?

First, it’s important to note how there’s non-guaranteed interest and non-guaranteed dividends being credited to the cash value, which, in the case of interest, could be lower than illustrated, and in the case of dividends, might not happen at all.

Yes, there are many carriers that have been around for hundreds of years who pay dividends every year, so it’s almost as if they’re guaranteed, but they aren’t.

The cost of insurance also isn’t guaranteed.  The numbers above reflect what would happen if all goes according to the illustration.

Here’s the “non-guaranteed” language at the bottom of the illustration:

Remember, I said to read the fine print.

The other problem here is the “never-miss-a-class, straight-A-report-card” policy owner who paid $5,225 per year for 25 years in a row, without missing a payment.

I don’t know about you, but my life hasn’t operated even remotely close to that level of certainty and perfection. Has yours?

Whole life insurance policies aren't founded in reality. Life happens, what if you miss a payment?
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Agents will say that you can add a “waiver of premium” rider, in case you happen to become disabled, which allows you to stop paying premiums, but that hardly solves most real world problems. What if you lose your job? What if you need to bail out a family member?

This should be particularly concerning for whole life “investors,” since the only way to avoid collapsing their policy when they start withdrawing funds is to take small amounts, probably not exceeding 3-4% of their cash value.

If they stray from that formula, as many do, then big problems can develop.

Watch what happens to the illustration above if “life happens,” and instead of paying every year for 25 years, you can’t afford to make a premium payment in year 10, and instead, have to take a $10,000 loan.

*Illustrations provided by Chris Huntley and are not to be considered an offer for insurance. Premiums and policy performance varies by company. Not available in all states.

You can see the estimated amount available for lifetime loans drops to $6,798.  That’s a big difference from the first illustration.  Let’s see the math.

With one simple deviation from your perfect plan, the amount available for supplemental retirement income has been reduced by 23%.

It’s this severe because even though we pulled out only $10,000, our policy costs didn’t decrease.  We still had to pay the cost of insurance associated with supporting a $250,000 death benefit.

Notice how severe this impact is compared to more straightforward investments that don’t have the life insurance wrapper.

**Please note I have not taken tax considerations into account in the above charts, as my intent was not to show how much more or less you could earn by choosing an alternate investment, but simply to show you how an alternate investment is not impacted as severely by unexpected changes, particularly when they occur early in the plan. I could have skewed this even more in favor of the “alternate investment” if I had adjusted the contribution for its pre-tax equivalent. In the same breath, the reverse is true for the tax-free vs. taxable distribution of the two options.

The key distinction between life insurance and other competing investments is life insurance is just a contractual obligation. If life goes awry when owning other investments, you can adjust your withdrawals because you control the asset.

You might have to adjust your living expenses because of withdrawal errors, but at least the corpus of your investment will not be affected.

But with whole life insurance, you’re bound by the contractual obligations of the policy, and may not have the same luxury.

Taking distributions from a whole life insurance policy can be more damaging than taking from an IRA
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What typically happens with whole life is the owners who purchased the policies were told to expect to rely on them for retirement income.

Upon retirement, they stop making premium payments, borrow

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