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Using Life Insurance to Build Wealth: The Strategy High Earners Use

If you earn well into six figures and have already maxed out your 401(k) and IRA, you have likely felt the frustration of hitting contribution ceilings. The IRS puts a hard cap on how much you can shelter from taxes each year in traditional retirement vehicles. But there is another asset class that has no such limit — and it has been a cornerstone of wealth planning for families with substantial incomes for over a century. Using life insurance to build wealth is not a gimmick or a loophole. It is a deliberate financial strategy that leverages the unique tax treatment of permanent life insurance to accumulate, protect, and transfer wealth in ways that stocks, bonds, and retirement accounts simply cannot replicate on their own.

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Before we dig into the mechanics, let us be clear about who this is for. This is not a strategy for someone who needs basic term coverage to protect a young family. This is for established earners — professionals, business owners, executives, and investors — who have surplus income and are looking for tax-efficient places to deploy it. According to LIMRA's 2024 report, permanent life insurance sales grew 7% year-over-year, with indexed universal life (IUL) sales hitting $3.4 billion in a single quarter. That growth is being driven overwhelmingly by high-net-worth buyers seeking exactly what we are about to discuss.

How Permanent Life Insurance Creates Cash Value

Every permanent life insurance policy — whether whole life, universal life, or indexed universal life — has two components: a death benefit and a cash value account. When you pay your premium, a portion covers the cost of insurance and administrative fees. The remainder goes into the cash value, where it grows over time.

Here is where the tax advantage comes in. Under current IRS rules (IRC Section 7702), the cash value inside a life insurance policy grows tax-deferred. You pay no capital gains tax on the growth each year. And if you access that money correctly — through policy loans rather than withdrawals — you can use it tax-free during your lifetime.

Whole Life vs. Indexed Universal Life

Whole life insurance offers guaranteed growth. The insurer credits a fixed interest rate to your cash value, and mutual companies pay annual dividends on top of that. Over the past decade, dividend rates from top-rated mutual insurers have ranged from 4.5% to 6.2%. The growth is slow and steady — but it is guaranteed, and it compounds without interruption.

Indexed universal life (IUL) ties your cash value growth to a market index like the S&P 500, but with a floor (typically 0% to 1%) and a cap (typically 9% to 12%). In years when the market rises, you capture a portion of that upside. In down years, your cash value does not decrease. This asymmetric risk profile is what attracts many wealth-oriented buyers. For a deeper comparison of IUL against traditional retirement accounts, see our analysis of IUL vs. 401(k) retirement strategies.

The Overfunding Strategy

The real wealth-building power is unlocked through "overfunding" the policy. This means paying more than the minimum premium required to keep the policy in force. The excess premium flows directly into the cash value, accelerating its growth. There is a limit — the IRS defines a "modified endowment contract" (MEC) threshold, and exceeding it changes the tax treatment. A properly designed policy is funded up to, but not beyond, the MEC line. This is precisely why working with a knowledgeable advisor matters so much.

Tax-Advantaged Access: The Policy Loan Strategy

Accumulating cash value is only half the equation. The other half is accessing it efficiently. This is where policy loans come into play, and it is the mechanism that makes life insurance uniquely powerful for high earners.

When you borrow against your life insurance policy, you are borrowing from the insurance company, using your cash value as collateral. The loan is not a taxable event. You do not report it as income. You do not pay capital gains. As long as the policy stays in force, you can use those funds for anything — supplementing retirement income, funding a business venture, making a real estate down payment, or covering a child's education.

To understand the full mechanics of how policy loans work, including interest rates and repayment options, read our detailed guide on borrowing against your life insurance.

When the insured eventually passes away, the outstanding loan balance is deducted from the death benefit. The remaining death benefit passes to beneficiaries income-tax-free under IRC Section 101(a). In this way, the policyholder effectively used the money during their lifetime without ever triggering a tax bill, and their heirs still receive a meaningful inheritance.

Why High Earners Are Choosing This Over Traditional Investments

Let us address the elephant in the room. Critics of this strategy will point out — correctly — that the returns inside a life insurance policy are lower than what you might earn in a diversified equity portfolio. Over the past 30 years, the S&P 500 has returned an average of roughly 10% annually before inflation. A well-structured IUL might capture 6% to 8% on average, and whole life is lower still.

So why would sophisticated investors choose this path? Several reasons:

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Structuring the Policy Correctly: Where Most People Go Wrong

The difference between a wealth-building life insurance policy and a mediocre one comes down to how it is designed from day one. Here are the critical factors:

Minimize the Death Benefit, Maximize the Cash Value

This sounds counterintuitive, but for wealth-building purposes, you want the minimum death benefit that the IRS allows relative to the premiums you are paying. A higher death benefit means more of your premium goes toward the cost of insurance, and less goes into the cash value. An experienced advisor will design the policy with the lowest permissible face amount to keep it under the MEC threshold while maximizing cash accumulation.

Use Paid-Up Additions (PUA) Riders

In whole life policies, a paid-up additions rider allows you to make extra premium payments that purchase small increments of fully paid-up insurance. These additions generate their own dividends and accelerate cash value growth. This is the primary mechanism for overfunding a whole life policy.

Choose the Right Carrier

Not all insurance companies are created equal. For whole life, you want a mutual insurer with a long track record of strong dividend payments — companies like MassMutual, Northwestern Mutual, or Guardian. For IUL, look at carriers with competitive cap rates, low policy charges, and strong financial ratings. The difference in net returns between a well-chosen carrier and a mediocre one can be 1% to 2% annually, which compounds to hundreds of thousands of dollars over a 20- to 30-year holding period.

Real Numbers: What a Wealth-Building Policy Looks Like

Consider a 42-year-old executive earning $400,000 annually. She has maxed out her 401(k) and backdoor Roth, and she wants to deploy an additional $60,000 per year into a tax-advantaged vehicle.

She purchases an IUL policy with a $2 million death benefit, structured at the MEC limit. Her annual premium is $60,000. Here is what the illustration might look like, assuming an average credited rate of 6.5%:

The compounding effect of tax-free growth, combined with the ability to access funds without triggering a taxable event, creates a powerful retirement supplement. It does not replace her 401(k) or investment portfolio — it complements them by adding a tax-diversified income stream that does not show up on her 1040.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

This strategy is powerful when executed correctly, but it can be costly when done poorly. Here are the pitfalls:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can life insurance really be used to build wealth?

Yes. Permanent life insurance products like whole life and indexed universal life (IUL) accumulate cash value on a tax-deferred basis. High earners use these policies as a supplemental wealth-building tool alongside traditional retirement accounts, particularly because there are no IRS contribution limits on premiums paid into a life insurance policy.

How much do I need to earn for this strategy to make sense?

This strategy is most effective for individuals earning $200,000 or more annually who have already maxed out their 401(k) and IRA contributions. If you are in the 32% tax bracket or higher and need additional tax-advantaged savings vehicles, permanent life insurance becomes a compelling option.

What is the difference between whole life and IUL for wealth building?

Whole life insurance offers guaranteed cash value growth with fixed premiums and dividends from mutual insurers. IUL policies tie cash value growth to a stock market index with a floor (typically 0–1%) and a cap (typically 9–12%). IUL has higher growth potential but less predictability, while whole life offers stability and guarantees.

Are there risks to using life insurance as a wealth-building tool?

Yes. If a policy lapses or is surrendered in the early years, you may lose a significant portion of your premiums to surrender charges. Over-borrowing against the policy can also cause it to lapse, triggering a taxable event. Working with an experienced advisor who structures the policy correctly from the start is essential.

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