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Indexed Life Insurance

What Is Indexed Life Insurance?

Indexed life insurance is a type of life insurance policy that ties the growth of its cash value to a financial market index, such as the S&P 500. Instead of investing directly in the market, the policy earns interest based on index performance.

These policies aim to offer potential growth while protecting against market losses.

Why It Matters

Indexed life insurance offers the opportunity for higher returns compared to traditional fixed policies while limiting downside risk. This can make it attractive for individuals seeking both insurance protection and long-term financial growth.

However, returns may be limited by caps or participation rates.

How Indexed Life Insurance Works

The insurer credits interest to the policy’s cash value based on changes in a chosen market index.

Policies often include features such as:

  • interest credit linked to index performance
  • caps on maximum returns
  • protection from negative market returns

Policyholders continue paying premiums to maintain coverage.

Example

If the linked market index increases during the year, the policy’s cash value may grow based on that performance up to the policy’s capped rate.

Indexed Life Insurance vs Variable Life Insurance

  • Indexed life insurance links growth to a market index but typically protects against losses.
  • Variable life insurance invests directly in market-based accounts that can both gain and lose value.

FAQs About Indexed Life Insurance

Does indexed life insurance invest directly in stocks?
No. It credits interest based on index performance.

Can indexed policies lose value?
They typically protect against negative market returns.

Are returns guaranteed?
Returns depend on index performance and policy terms.

Related Terms