Frequently Asked Questions
How does whole life cash value grow?
Premiums fund three components: cost of insurance, policy expenses, and cash value buildup. Years 1-3 typically show little cash value because front-end loaded expenses dominate. After year 10-15 the cash value typically equals 70-90% of cumulative premiums. Long-run internal rate of return on cash value historically averages 1.5%-3.5% per industry studies - far below diversified equity returns.
What are dividends on whole life policies?
Participating policies from mutual insurers pay dividends - technically a refund of overcharged premium based on company surplus. Dividends can be taken in cash, used to reduce premiums, buy paid-up additions, or accumulate at interest. They are not guaranteed; current dividend interest rates in 2026 range roughly 4.5%-6.0% before policy expenses.
Should I borrow against my cash value?
Policy loans typically charge 5%-8% interest and reduce death benefit by the unpaid balance. They are not taxable while the policy remains in force (because they're technically loans, not withdrawals). But if the policy lapses with a loan outstanding, the loan amount above basis becomes taxable income - sometimes causing a large surprise tax bill on retirees.
Is whole life better than buy-term-and-invest-the-difference?
For most people, no. The premium gap is large: $500K of 20-year term costs $20-30/month at age 35 vs. $400-500/month for whole life. Investing that $370+/month difference in a low-cost index fund at 7% real returns produces a much larger nest egg than the whole life cash value over 30 years. Whole life is mainly suited for estate planning above the federal estate tax threshold ($13.99M in 2025).
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