First off, I want to discuss term insurance, because it is, essentially, a HUGE piece of permanent insurance planning, is massively important in and of itself, and has some unintuitive planning opportunities built into it, and absolutely shouldn't be ignored. So here goes...
Term Life Insurance
Essentially, this stuff can come in various forms, but the easiest split is that of between level term and Yearly Renewable Term (YRT).
Level term, as it sounds, charges you a flat amount over a given period, and is often convertible to permanent coverage.
- YRT comes in various forms, but the best policies out there start lower than level term but get more expensive over time (not a bait/switch, but simply an accurate reflection of your mortality curve) based on one of several health classes. You always have the ability to reduce or cancel these policies (as with level term), and they usually will let you convert to permanent coverage all the way out to age 60 or 65, while letting you hold YRT coverage all the way out to age 80 or I've seen as high as 115 (the policy I will be referencing here). Obviously, at 115 (or even much younger), YRT is very expensive.
- There is a "projected premium" that you get charged if everything goes as planned. However, if the insurance company recognizes some unforeseen losses due to the mortality of the people who hold term insurance, they can apply to the state Departments of Commerce (Insurance Commissioner) and have rates raised from the projected rates, as potentially high as the "guaranteed" rates. However, top mutual life-insurance carriers haven't EVER gone higher than projected rates since their inception in the 1800's.
My initial entry into life insurance left me wondering (and of utmost pertinence to people here), "if I'm going to buy term insurance, which one should I buy?" This resulted in some spectacular (to a nerd like me) back and forth between me and several life insurance agents and sources.
Essentially, I wanted to know how I could obtain a given amount of life insurance as CHEAPLY as possible and as FLEXIBLE as possible over time. Here's a few options:
1) Buy very short-duration level term (10 year): Fail. It's inefficient given the pricing of 10 year term at young ages, and if you're uninsurable at year 11, you can't get coverage. If you're not healthy, it will be SUPER expensive compared to a policy obtained when at a good health rate. It's cheaper to just hold a YRT contract for 10 years in many cases.
2) Buy long-duration level term (30 year): Works ok. You pay a decent chunk for 30 year term over 10 year (especially as you get older). But you're pre-paying premium for quite some time. And in many cases, the next option had very appealing break-even numbers. Something always bugs me about prepaying term insurance with a hard line of elimination of coverage. For instance, with a 20-year level term policy. If I truly want $0 of life insurance at year 21, what are the chances I'll still want $1 Million at year 19... why "pre-pay"for it with level term if I'm really barely going to need it? And vice versa... if I REALLY want $1 Million of life insurance from years 16 to 20 instead of buying a cheaper 15 year term insurance, am I REALLY not going to care if I potentially have ZERO life insurance in year 21.
A plan that more effectively allowed for tapering of coverage seemed to be a better option.
3) Ladder life insurance (Use a chunk of 10, 20 and 30 year term): Pretty cool. This was my favorite option. If I wanted $1.5 Million, get $500k of 15 year term, $500k of 20 year term, and $500k of 30 year term. That way I'm tapering off coverage if I want, but if God-forbid I really want coverage and can't get it, at least I still have a big chunk of remaining life insurance. However, I still thought there might be a better option, since policy fees and short-term policies make insurance less efficient purchased in little chunks.
4) Buy YRT and hold it: as long and to whatever degree you need it Bingo If applied NO TVoM to my premiums, a lot of times YRT policies wouldn't become more cumulatively expensive than 30 year level policies until year 25 or so. They were WAY less expensive starting out. This effect is especially true for younger people (25-35) rather than older (45+).
If I applied a TVoM for the illiquidity of my "overpayment" of term insurance doing 30-year level of 8% or so (not an unfair requirement for ILLIQUID Required Rate of Return), the YRT proved far cheaper.
But you don't hold insurance in a vacuum. The possibility of wanting to start tapering off coverage at year 15 or 20, or God-forbid CONTINUE coverage past year 30, made YRT even that much MORE appealing. The cost of $1 Million of Guardian YRT at TOP health rates at age 50 was $1,360 annually. That is NOT that much, even if it's more than my disappearing 30 year level term at that time. I believe I'd have to live to age 91 to pay in MORE premium than the $1 Mil death benefit that would pay out, with this policy. This is how STRONG of a deal this is. It was a no-brainer to do YRT. I pay far-less than 30-year level if I want to ditch it early, but if I want to continue the term insurance, it's a steal of a deal.
Further, if mortality improves, my health stays good, rates drop, etc, I can always get a NEW insurance policy and ditch my old YRT policy that's getting more expensive. I just have to apply and replace it. As one gets into upswinging term insurance cost-curve, level term usually tended to make more sense, but
There is nothing MASSIVELY fundamentally different about my net worth the day my insurance falls off from the day before, when I had a ton of coverage. What an inefficient economic tool to generate
But the next question got begged... What's the "cost of waiting" if I drop a health class?
This one shocked me, but it makes sense if you think about it. Dropping health classes costs you a TON in future premiums. Depending which class you're jumping to/from, it can cost you almost 30% more from one to the next close one.
This means that locking in health class when young ($40/month for a 27 year old for $1 Million of Guardian YRT) can have huge dominos going forward in terms of saved premium. Even if it's 1 or 2 health classes down from that top rate, we're talking 10% to 30% on their premiums over decades (when the spreads are growing). Once you take the NEXT step down in health class to "non-smoker" rates, you're talking a HUGE jump. A non-smoker will pay about 70% more than an "Elite" health class from 30-49 in term insurance.
Long-story short, loading up on lots of high quality YRT term life insurance early on is the way to go. It was literally only $40/mo for Elite coverage for myself a few years ago of $1 Mil. As you get into your 40's, level term is arguably better, but I still have my qualms about prepaying for life insurance I may not want AND simultaneously creating a hard line of potential uninsurability in my life insurance planning. Plus another reason I'll get into when talking about permanent insurance.
Further, if you know how life-settlement and critical illness riders work, you can usually get cash out of a cash-less life insurance policy by "selling" it to someone if you're sick and have a low chance of making it more than a few years. This is another topic I can post more detail on.
Permanent Insurance
So now that I've explained to you my love for YRT term life obtained in high doses at a young age, let me get into permanent coverage. My curiosity for this stuff came when I was 24 and was sold a $180k Whole Life (WL) policy from a Northwestern Mutual agent. All-in-all, it was a garbage policy. Not because of NW Mutual, but because of the policy design by the agent. I'm going to go into a quick explanation of a few different kinds of permanent coverage.
Whole Life Insurance
WL, generally, is permanent insurance built on the idea that if you pay a guaranteed premium for a guaranteed amount of time, you get a guaranteed permanent death-benefit and a growing guaranteed cash-value. Since we're talking about "participating" whole life, here, there will be dividends paid back to policy owners in a few available forms. 1) Reduce next-year's premium. 2) Payment via check. 3) Purchase of "Paid Up Additions" (essentially adding a tiny small "paid up" whole life policy to your existing permanent policy). Paid up Additions are a huge part of WL that I'll talk about later.
The premiums in excess of admin & mortality costs are invested in the firm's general fund. Basically, this fund is a bunch of bonds and some non-leveraged real estate interests. Up to $130,000 of MY cash-value is protected by the MN Life & Health Insurance Guarantee Fund. Keep in mind, these companies have not only survived massive financial crises time and time again, but paid dividends without even blinking in those environments.
These policies are usually very rigid. You can't increase premium to add to cash-value. You can't decrease premium unless you use dividends or borrow from the policy to do so, and the early year cash-values are very, very low compared to premiums paid. It often takes even the best of these policies to break even around 10 years.
A contract I've had my friend design with a $1,000,000 DB for a good health 30-year-old at Guardian costs $8,660, and when adjusted for a cost of term insurance not-needed for $1 Mil, breaks even in about 10 years (first two years have NO cash value), and has a 2.5% GUARANTEED long-term RoR on Cash Value (age 60). If he lives out to his life expectancy, he has a guaranteed RoR on the $1 Mil DB of 2.75%.
If dividends are paid based on the current scale, he will see a DB RoR of 4.8% @ life expectancy, and a CV RoR @ age 60 of 4.3%.
This is a decent policy, but it get's MUCH better than this from a flexibility standpoint, and from an early-year CV standpoint.... I'll get to that in a moment.
Universal Life Insurance
Universal Life (UL) is a product that apparently came out as a result of the in-flexibility of Whole Life. Essentially, it has fewer guarantees, but more flexibility with payments, as it's essentially built on term insurance chassis. There are payment options where if you make some minimum required payment, you're guarantee a death benefit, but that's basically because it covers the cost of mortality over time.
With a UL, you have more investment options, too. Instead of participating in the insurance company's general fund, you can invest in mutual funds. I haven't looked nearly as closely at these, mainly because of what I can do with a whole life policy now (see below). But there's definitely more exploring worth doing. From what I've seen, though, you can get more attractive terms out of essentially "building" your own UL with a blended whole-life policy.
You can "under-fund" them and just pay for term. Or you can "over-fund" them and get a bunch more cash-value. They still often have very low accessible cash-values early on.
Blended Whole Life
This stuff is cool. It's essentially a few things wrapped into one package:
1) A standard Whole Life Policy (like the one I detailed above).
2) A YRT policy (my favorite kind of term), but when wrapped in a blended policy it's often even cheaper than the YRT rates at a given health class.
3) "Paid Up Additions"
The first two are already explained... except the fact that if you LOOK at the YRT rates in a "blended" whole life policy, they're even CHEAPER than YRT term insurance. Depending on your health class, YRT premiums outside a blended policy can be anywhere from 15%-40% higher for the SAME health class if those premiums were instead built into a blended WL contract.
So now for what a "Paid Up Addition" is. It's what is referred to as a "Paid Up Life Insurance Policy," essentially. This is a TYPE of whole life policy where I just give the insurance company ONE payment, of, say $100,000, and I would then have a life insurance contract with a death benefit of about $500,000. (in the case of Guardian, anyway, at the age of 30).
That policy will have a 5% "load" on the cash-value, so I'll have $95,000 in cash-value that will grow at a nice guaranteed clip (guaranteed around 3.5% I think, long-term), and once you throw dividends in at current rates you're looking in the mid 5% range.
So the way you design these is instead of being a guy who buys $1,000,000 of Whole Life (like the policy I showed above), if you really want $1,000,000 of death benefit, and can afford to put in $8,660 per year, you would fund a policy to that $8,660 level, but it would look like this:
$200,000 of standard WL Policy @ $1,812 of premium
$800,000 of YRT @ $427 of premium
Paid-Up Additions (PUA's) of $6,421
A few things about this:
1) The policy's death benefit doesn't grow overall, because paid-up additions simply "buy-out" the $800,000 of term insurance over time.
2) If you needed to, you could completely eliminate the PUAs. This would mean you're only paying $2,239 per year.
3) If you wanted to, you could put a ton more cash into the policy than just $6,421 of PUA. You could put up to about $20,000 per year into it in total.
4) If you want to, you can get rid of as much of that YRT term insurance within the contract as you wish, though it will affect how much cash you can put in the policy.
5) The early year cash-values are FAR better. Instead of no cash in year 2, you have $12,662. However, breakeven point is only brought one year sooner to year 9.
6) Long-term RoR is about the same @ 4.3%.
7) You can borrow from the policy or surrendor PUA's. I could get into policy loans but that's a bear of a conversation in and of itself.
The reason I like this policy is:
1) It locks me into cheaper long-term term rates for the same health class, if I want to fund it sparsely.
2) It gives me amazing opportunities to fund it richly, if I so choose.
3) It locks in the long-term RoR of not just dollars I invest today but dollars I invest tomorrow. This is a leveraged way, of sorts, for me to apply my deflationist predictions (well not "deflation." Low inflation and low interest rates)
4) This is all tax-free and semi-liquid if you do it right.
5) Backed by state of MN
6) If mortality rates continue to improve, but my health goes, I've locked in a permanent policy that reflects those improvements. If mortality rates go to shit... I've got attractive guarantees.
7) Early year CV is FAR more attractive than most policies, and this is the Achilles Heel of most life insurance policies... the early years suck.

Of course, this is all flawed in the sense that these are NOT treasury bonds, and have risks involved. This is why this is a VP play for me. I'm sure there's tons of questions. Sorry I've probably left out a ton, but as you can see, there's lots to cover.