Borrowing Against Your Life Insurance: How Policy Loans Work
One of the most powerful and least understood features of permanent life insurance is the ability to borrow against your life insurance policy. Unlike bank loans, there is no credit check, no application process, and no required repayment schedule. The money is available at your discretion, and the tax treatment is remarkably favorable. For high earners and wealth-builders, policy loans represent a source of liquidity that banks simply cannot match.
But policy loans are not without complexity. Misusing them can erode your death benefit, trigger unexpected taxes, or even cause your policy to lapse. This guide explains exactly how policy loans work, when they make strategic sense, and the pitfalls to avoid.
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When you borrow against your life insurance, you are technically borrowing from the insurance company — not from your own cash value. Your cash value serves as collateral for the loan. The insurer lends you money using the general account, and your policy's cash value guarantees the loan.
This distinction matters because your cash value continues to grow even while the loan is outstanding. In a participating whole life policy, your cash value still earns dividends on the full amount. In an indexed universal life (IUL) policy, the full cash value may still participate in index-linked gains depending on the policy structure.
Loan Amounts and Availability
You can generally borrow up to 90 to 95 percent of your policy's cash surrender value. The cash surrender value is your total cash value minus any surrender charges. There are no restrictions on how you use the funds — you can pay for a business investment, cover education costs, supplement retirement income, or handle an emergency.
To initiate a loan, you simply contact your insurance company or submit a request through their online portal. Most companies process loan requests within a few business days. There is no underwriting, no credit check, no income verification, and no waiting period (as long as your policy has sufficient cash value).
Interest Rates on Policy Loans
Policy loan interest rates typically range from 5 to 8 percent depending on the carrier and policy type. Here is how rates generally break down:
| Policy Type | Typical Loan Rate | Rate Type |
|---|---|---|
| Whole Life (Mutual Companies) | 5.0% – 6.0% | Fixed |
| Whole Life (Stock Companies) | 6.0% – 8.0% | Fixed or Variable |
| Universal Life | 5.5% – 7.5% | Variable |
| Indexed Universal Life | 5.0% – 8.0% | Variable (often tied to Moody's index) |
Some mutual whole life carriers offer what is called a "wash loan" or "zero-net-cost loan" for policies that have been in force for a certain number of years (usually 10 to 15). In these arrangements, the dividend credited to your cash value equals or exceeds the loan interest rate, effectively making the loan cost-neutral. This is one of the most attractive features of well-structured participating whole life policies.
The Tax Advantages of Policy Loans
Policy loans receive some of the most favorable tax treatment in the financial world. Under current IRS rules:
- Loans are not taxable income. When you borrow against your policy, the IRS does not treat the proceeds as income. There is no tax event when you take the loan.
- Cash value grows tax-deferred. The gains inside your policy accumulate without annual taxation, similar to a retirement account — but without contribution limits or required minimum distributions.
- Death benefit passes income-tax-free. Under IRC Section 101(a), the death benefit paid to your beneficiaries is generally not subject to income tax. Any outstanding loan balance is simply deducted from the death benefit.
This combination — tax-free access to cash, tax-deferred growth, and tax-free death benefit — is what makes permanent life insurance attractive as a wealth-building tool. For more on how this fits into a broader financial strategy, see our article on using life insurance to build wealth.
Strategic Uses for Policy Loans
Smart policyholders use loans strategically, not as a piggy bank for impulse spending. Here are the most common and effective uses:
Supplementing Retirement Income
One of the most popular strategies is using policy loans to create tax-free retirement income. In a well-funded whole life or IUL policy, you can accumulate cash value during your working years and then take annual policy loans in retirement to supplement Social Security, 401(k) distributions, and pension income.
Because policy loans are not reported as income on your tax return, they do not increase your adjusted gross income (AGI). This can help you avoid higher Medicare premiums (IRMAA surcharges), reduce taxation on Social Security benefits, and stay in a lower tax bracket. For high earners who expect to be in a significant tax bracket in retirement, this is a meaningful benefit.
Funding Business Opportunities
Business owners frequently use policy loans for working capital, equipment purchases, or bridging cash flow gaps. The advantage over traditional business loans is speed and simplicity — there is no lender approval process, no restrictive covenants, and no impact on your business credit. You can access funds in days rather than weeks.
Real Estate Down Payments
Policy loans can serve as a source of down payment funds for real estate investments. Because the loan comes from the insurance company rather than a bank, it does not appear as debt on your credit report, which can preserve your borrowing capacity for the mortgage itself. This is a strategy used frequently by real estate investors who want to move quickly on opportunities.
Covering Education Costs
Unlike 529 plans, which must be used for qualified education expenses, policy loan proceeds can be used for any purpose — tuition, room and board, living expenses, or anything else. And because they are not counted as income on the FAFSA, they do not reduce financial aid eligibility the way 529 withdrawals and other income sources can.
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Policy loans are powerful, but they require discipline and awareness. Here are the most common mistakes:
Over-Borrowing and Policy Lapse
The biggest risk is borrowing too much relative to your cash value. Loan interest accrues and is added to the loan balance. If the total loan balance (principal plus accumulated interest) exceeds the policy's cash value, the insurance company will notify you that the policy is about to lapse. You will typically have a window (30 to 60 days) to repay enough of the loan to prevent the lapse.
If the policy does lapse, two things happen simultaneously: you lose your death benefit, and you may owe income tax on the gains in the policy. For a policy with $300,000 in cash value and $180,000 in total premiums paid, a lapse could create a $120,000 taxable event — resulting in a tax bill of $30,000 or more depending on your bracket.
Reduced Death Benefit
Any outstanding loan balance at the time of death is deducted from the death benefit paid to your beneficiaries. If your policy has a $1 million death benefit and a $250,000 outstanding loan, your beneficiaries receive $750,000. Make sure your family understands this and that the reduced benefit still meets their needs.
MEC Status
If your policy has been classified as a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) — typically because it was overfunded relative to the death benefit — policy loans lose their tax-free status. Loans from a MEC are taxed as ordinary income to the extent there are gains in the policy, and a 10 percent penalty may apply if you are under age 59½. Avoid over-funding your policy to the point of MEC classification. A knowledgeable advisor will structure premiums to stay within MEC limits.
Policy Loans vs. Other Borrowing Options
How do policy loans compare to other common borrowing methods? Here is a side-by-side comparison:
| Feature | Policy Loan | HELOC | 401(k) Loan | Personal Loan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Credit check required | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Interest rate | 5–8% | 7–10% | Prime + 1% | 8–15% |
| Tax on proceeds | No* | No | No | No |
| Required repayment | No | Yes | Yes (5 years) | Yes |
| Affects credit score | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Risk if not repaid | Policy lapse | Home foreclosure | Tax + penalty | Collections |
*Tax-free as long as the policy remains in force and is not a MEC.
Policy loans offer unique flexibility, but they work best as part of a comprehensive financial strategy — not as a first resort for every borrowing need. For a broader comparison of life insurance as a financial tool versus traditional retirement vehicles, see our IUL vs 401(k) comparison.
How to Build Enough Cash Value to Borrow Against
Policy loans are only available once your policy has accumulated meaningful cash value. This typically takes 5 to 10 years of consistent premium payments, depending on how the policy is structured. Key considerations:
- Start early. The sooner you begin funding a permanent policy, the more time your cash value has to compound. A policy started at age 35 will have significantly more cash value at age 55 than one started at age 45.
- Pay more than the minimum. Most permanent policies allow additional premium payments (up to MEC limits) that accelerate cash value growth. Paid-up additions (PUAs) in whole life policies are the most common vehicle for this.
- Choose a carrier with strong dividend history. For whole life policies, dividends are a major driver of cash value growth. Mutual companies like MassMutual, Northwestern Mutual, and New York Life have paid dividends consistently for over 100 years, though past performance does not guarantee future results.
- Work with an experienced advisor. The way a policy is structured at inception — the death benefit to premium ratio, rider selection, and PUA allocation — determines how efficiently cash value accumulates. This is not a product to buy without professional guidance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you borrow against a term life insurance policy?
No. Term life insurance does not build cash value, so there is nothing to borrow against. Policy loans are only available with permanent life insurance policies — whole life, universal life, and indexed universal life — that have accumulated sufficient cash value.
Do you have to pay back a life insurance policy loan?
Technically, no. There is no required repayment schedule. However, unpaid loans accrue interest that is added to the loan balance. If the total loan balance (principal plus accumulated interest) grows to exceed the cash value, the policy will lapse, which can trigger a taxable event and leave you without coverage.
Are life insurance policy loans taxable?
Policy loans are generally not considered taxable income as long as the policy remains in force. This is because you are technically borrowing against your own asset, not receiving income. However, if the policy lapses or is surrendered with an outstanding loan, the loan amount may become taxable to the extent it exceeds your cost basis in the policy.
What interest rate do life insurance companies charge on policy loans?
Policy loan interest rates typically range from 5 to 8 percent, depending on the insurance company and the type of policy. Whole life policies tend to have fixed loan rates, often around 5 to 6 percent. Universal life and IUL policies may have variable rates tied to an index. Some participating whole life policies offer wash loans where the dividend rate offsets the loan rate.
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