What Is Variable Survivorship Life Insurance?
Variable survivorship life insurance is a type of variable life insurance policy that covers two individuals and pays a death benefit to a beneficiary only after both people have died. It may pay out a benefit prior to the first policyholder’s death if the policy has a living benefit rider. The living benefit rider is often automatically included in life insurance policies at no cost. This rider allows access to a certain amount of policy death benefit in the case of terminal illness as defined in the policy.
Variable survivorship life insurance is also called “survivorship variable life insurance” or “last-survivor life insurance.”
Understanding Variable Survivorship Life Insurance
Like any variable life policy, variable survivorship life insurance has a cash value component in which a portion of each premium payment is set aside to be invested by the policyholder, who bears all investment risk. The insurer selects several dozen investment options from which the policyholder may choose.
The other portion of the premium goes toward administrative expenses and the policy’s death benefit (also called face value). This type of policy is legally considered a security because of its investment component and is subject to regulation by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
A more flexible version of variable survivorship life insurance called “variable universal survivorship life insurance” allows the policyholder to adjust the policy’s premiums and death benefit during the policy’s life.
Benefits of Variable Survivorship Life Insurance
Policies allow you to invest premiums
Variable survivorship life insurance policies let policyholders invest premiums in a separate account whose value will fluctuate based on the performance of the market.
Policies are cheaper
Variable survivorship life insurance is typically thousands of dollars cheaper than regular single-insured life insurance because the premiums associated with survivorship policies are determined by the joint life expectancy of the insured parties. As such, premiums are cheaper than purchasing individual policies for both individuals because the insurance company is not obligated to pay benefits until the deaths of both policyholders occur.
They’re easier to buy
It is significantly easier to qualify for a survivorship life policy than is it to qualify for single-insured life insurance. This is mainly due to the fact that variable survivorship life insurance companies are less worried about the health statuses of the individual policyholders, who must both die before the benefit is paid. Consequently, underwriting is less stringent and acceptance is more likely.
They build estates
Survivorship life insurance is sometimes touted as a means to grow an estate and not just shield the estate from tax liabilities. The death benefit of a survivorship life policy is similar to traditional life insurance in that it can ensure beneficiaries receive at least a moderate payout, even if a policyholder burns through his entire estate during the beneficiary’s lifetime.
They preserve estates
Individuals interested in bequeathing their assets to their loved ones tend to favor survivorship life insurance policies because they provide liquidity for an estate to cover various taxes.