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A B C
D E F
G H I J K
L M N
O P Q R S
T U V
W X Y Z
- Accelerated Benefits/Living Benefits Riders:
These riders let policyholders, which may be terminally ill or
critically ill, draw upon a percentage of the face value of their life
insurance policies. Conditions under which this option can be
exercised and the amount available to the policyholder can vary with
each insurance company.
- Accidental Death Benefit: An extra feature of a life
insurance policy that provides an additional benefit if the insured
dies in an accident. Because the face amount of the policy is often
doubled under this proportion.
- Accumulation Period: The period of time in a deferred
annuity during which the purchase price is deposited with the insurer
and accumulated at interest. It ends with the start of the liquidation
period.
- Activities of Daily Living (ADL's): Activities such as
eating, bathing, and dressing. The inability to perform a specified
number of these activities triggers eligibility for benefits in a
long-term care insurance contract.
- Actual Cash Value: A process for valuing property loss.
Usually it is defined as replacement cost less depreciation but in
some states is defined as fair market value.
- Adverse Selection: Selection against the insurance company.
It is the tendency for those who know that they are highly vulnerable
to specific pure risks to be most likely to acquire and to retain
insurance to cover that loss.
- Agent: Consumers' primary link to an insurance company.
Agents work with consumers to assess their needs and plan for
long-term financial stability. Agents may also be referred to as
insurance advisors, financial advisors, financial representatives,
associates, life underwriters, and field underwriters.
- Annual Exclusion: The amount of a gift exempt from federal
transfer taxation. Currently it is $10,000 annually for gifts to any
one person. This can be increased to $20,000 if the donor is married
and the donor's spouse elects to split the gift on a timely filed gift
tax return.
- Annuity: A financial contract that provides continuing
income, typically for retirement.
- Annuitization: The conversion of an accumulated sum of
money into benefit-paying status as an annuity.
- Application for insurance: A form that furnishes the
insurance company with necessary information on the applicant's age,
sex, address, occupation, earnings, height, weight, medical history
and other facts. The company uses this information to determine
whether or not to insure the applicant.
- Automatic Premium Loan Option: An option associated with a
cash value life insurance policy whereby, if a renewal premium is not
paid by the end of the grace period, the insurer creates a loan
against the cash value in the amount of the unpaid premium.
- Basis Point: One one-hundredth of a
percentage point (for example, a rise in yield from 6 percent to 6 3/4
percent is a gain of 75 basis points)
- Binder: A written or oral agreement between an agent and an
applicant for insurance whereby the principal-insurer is committed to
provide the desired insurance, at least on a temporary basis
- Buy-sell Agreement: A contract binding the owner of a
business interest to sell the business interest for a specified or
determinable price at his or her death or disability and a designated
purchaser to buy at that time.
- Cancelable: A contract in which the
insurance company reserves the right to terminate the coverage at any
time (and perhaps for any reason) during the term of coverage by
providing notice to the insured.
- Capital Needs Analysis: A system for determining how much
life insurance a client needs if the principal sum is to be preserved
in the process of meeting the financial objectives for his or her
survivors.
- Cash Value: The savings element that builds up in a
permanent life insurance policy, an endowment policy, or an annuity
contract.
- Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU): An individual who has
attained a high degree of technical competency in the fields of life
and health insurance and who is expected to abide by a code of ethics.
Must have minimum of three years of experience in life or health
insurance sales and have passed ten professional examinations
administered by The American College.
- COBRA: A provision of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 that requires group health plans to allow
employees and certain beneficiaries to elect that their current health
insurance coverage be extended at groups rates for up to 36 months,
following a qualifying event that results in the loss of coverage. The
provision applies only to employers with 20 or more employees. In
addition, a person electing COBRA continuation can be required to pay
a premium equal to as much as 102 percent of the cost to the employee
benefit plan for the period of coverage for a similarly situated
active employee to whom a qualifying event has not occurred.
- Coinsurance: The percentage of covered expenses under a
major medical plan that is paid once a deductible is satisfied. The
most common coinsurance is 80 percent. A provision whereby a property
owner must share in a loss if the amount of insurance carried is less
than a specified percentage of value. A reinsurance arrangement in
which a primary life insurance company cedes a specified percentage of
the face amount of a policy or block or policies to a reinsurer.
- Comparative Negligence: The legal principle whereby an
injured party can recover a portion of the damage for his or her
injuries if he or she were also negligent. In some jurisdictions, a
plaintiff can recover only if his or her negligence is less (or not
more) than the defendant's negligence.
- Conditional Receipt: A receipt given to an applicant of
life insurance in exchange for the payment of the first premium in
which the insurer, through its agent, specifies that the coverage will
be effective as of the date of the receipt, subject to the condition
that the proposed insured later be found to have been insurable as of
the date the receipt was issued.
- Contestability Period: Usually a specific time frame,
commonly two years, during which the insurer may deny coverage, void a
contract or question the validity of a claim.
- Contingent Beneficiary: The person designated to receive
the death proceeds of a life insurance policy if the primary
beneficiary predeceases the insured.
- Contingent Liability: Legal liability that arises because
of work performed by an independent contractor, such as a subcontract
of a business.
- Cross-purchase Agreement: A business buy-sell agreement in
which the surviving co-owners will be the purchasers of the business
interest of a deceased owner.
- Conversion: A provision in a group benefit plan that gives
an employee whose coverage ceases the right to convert to an
individual insurance policy without providing evidence of
insurability. The conversion policy may or may not be identical to the
prior group coverage.
- Convertibility: A feature in term life insurance that
allows the insured to replace the term coverage with permanent
individual life insurance without having to show evidence of
insurability. In group insurance, the right is available only at
certain times, including termination of the insured from the group or
from an eligible class within the group.
- Coordination of benefits: Coordination of benefits prevents
duplication or overlapping for the same expense when a policyholder
owns two or more group policies. This allows one insurance carrier to
be aware of any other insurance coverage the policyholder may have.
The two companies determine which company has the primary
responsibility to pay and which company has the secondary
responsibility after the benefits from the primary insurer are
exhausted.
- Co-insurance: A provision of a medical expense insurance
policy that requires the insured to pay a percentage of all eligible
medical expenses, in excess of the deductible, that result from
sickness or injury.
- Deductible: The amount a policyholder must
pay before insurance covers any expenses. The insurance program pays
benefits only for losses over the amount stated in the deductible
provision.
- Deferred Annuity: A financial product that allows you to
accumulate money on a tax-deferred basis, when purchased from an
insurance company, that can subsequently be paid out as income or
taken in a lump sum.
- Dependent: Most commonly defined under a group medical
expense plan to include an employee's spouse who is not legally
separated from the employee and any other unmarried dependent children
(including stepchildren and adopted children) under age 19 or, if full
time students, age 23.
- Disability Insurance: Health insurance designed to provide
financial payments to replace an insured's income if he/she is unable
to work due to an illness or injury.
- Dividend Options: A set of provisions in a participating
life insurance policy that describe how the policyowner can use the
dividends, usually to reduce the premium payment, to buy additional
paid-up permanent insurance, to accumulate at interest, to buy term
insurance, or to make the policy a paid-up policy at an earlier age
than originally planned.
- Dollar-cost averaging: A formula plan for timing of
investment transactions, in which a fixed dollar amount is invested in
a security in each period; a passive buy-and-hold strategy in which
the amount of periodic investment is held constant.
- Elimination period or waiting period: The
time a policyholder must be insured under the policy before he/she is
eligible for benefits.
- Endorsement: A provision added to a property or liability
insurance policy, sometimes for an extra premium charge, by which the
scope of the policy's coverage is clarified, restricted, or enlarged.
- Endowment: A type of life insurance policy that pays the
face amount if the insured dies during a specific period of time and
also pays the face amount if he or she lives to end of that period.
- Errors and Omissions Insurance: A type of professional
liability for those in occupations such as real estate appraising and
accounting, where the professional's acts or omissions are unlikely to
result in bodily injury.
- Exclusions: This term refers to losses or risks that a
policy does not cover.
- Exclusion Ratio: The ratio used to determine the portion of
the benefit payment from an annuity that is tax free as a return of
the investment in the contract. It is the ratio of the total amount
invested to the total amount expected to be received.
- Extended Care Facility: A skilled nursing home o
rehabilitation center equipped to provide full nursing care that has a
transfer agreement with a hospital.
- Face amount: The amount stated on the
policy that will be paid at death or maturity. It does not include
additional amounts payable under accidental death or other special
provisions, or acquired through the use of policy dividends.
- Fifth Dividend Option: A provision in cash value life
insurance whereby dividends can be used to purchase increasing term
insurance.
- Fixed Annuity: An annuity that provides a stated dollar
benefit, regardless of the insurer's investment return.
- Free-look period: Time during which the policyholder may
return the policy if he/she is not completely satisfied and receive a
complete refund. The customary length of time for a "free look" is 30
days for policies purchased through the mail and 10 days for those
purchased from an agent.
- General Agent: In the legal sense, an agent
who has the authority to bind the insurance company on a risk. In life
insurance marketing, the term refers to an entrepreneur who is granted
a franchise by an insurer to build an agency force for the marketing
of the insurer's products in a given geographic area.
- Grace Period: An additional period of time, usually 31
days, granted in some types of insurance for the policyowner to pay
the premium after it has become due. During the grace period, the
coverage remains in force.
- Guaranteed Renewable: A policy that is renewable at the
policyholder's option and cannot be terminated by the insurance
company.
- Health Maintenance Organization (HMO): A
managed system of health care that provides a comprehensive array of
medical services on a prepaid basis to voluntarily enrolled persons
living within a specific geographic region. HMO's both finance health
care and deliver health services. There is an emphasis on preventive
care as well as cost control.
- Health Savings Accounts (HSAs): An HSA is a tax-exempt
trust or custodial account established for the purpose of paying
medical expenses in conjunction with a high-deductible health plan.
The HSA cannot stand alone — it can only be combined with a high
deductible health insurance plan. A number of the rules that apply to
HSAs are similar to rules that apply to individual retirement
arrangements (IRAs).
- Hold-Harmless Agreement: An agreement in which one party,
such as a tenant, accepts the responsibility of another party, such as
a landlord, for losses that would otherwise fall on that other party.
- Hospital Indemnity Insurance: A medical expense policy that
pays a fixed dollar amount for each day a person is hospitalized,
regardless of other insurance.
- Implied Warranty: An obligation imposed by
law on the manufacturer or distributor of products.
- Inflation Guard Endorsements: A homeowners endorsement that
provides an automatic increase for property coverages. The policyowner
selects the annual percentage rate.
- Insurable Interest: A right or relationship with regard to
the subject matter of an insurance contract such that the insured will
suffer financial loss from damage, loss, or destruction to that
subject matter.
- Joint-and-Last-Survivor Annuity: An annuity
whose benefit payments continue until the last death among specified
lives.
- Joint-Life Policy: A type of life insurance policy covering
two or more persons in which the proceeds are payable on the death of
the first one to die.
- Life Annuity Certain: A life annuity that
provides a guaranteed minimum number of benefit payments whether the
annuitant live or dies. It is a combination of an annuity certain and
a pure deferred life annuity.
- Liquidity: The ability to convert an investment asset into
cash quickly without loss of value.
- Long-Term Care Insurance: A form of health insurance that
usually provides coverage for custodial care, intermediate care, and
skilled-nursing care. Benefits may also be available for home health
care, adult day care, and assisted living. Benefits are usually
limited to a specified dollar amount per day.
- Loss Ratio Method of RateMaking: A method in which the
actual loss ratio is compared to the desired or expected loss ratio to
determine the change needed in an existing insurance rate.
- Major Medical Insurance: A medical
insurance plan designed to provide substantial protection against
catastrophic medical expenses. There are a few exclusions and
limitations, but deductibles and coinsurance are commonly used.
- Managed Care: A process to deliver cost-effective health
care without sacrificing quality or access. Common characteristics
include controlled access to providers, comprehensive case management,
preventive care, risk taking, and high-quality care.
- Marital Deduction: An unlimited amount that can be taken as
a deduction against the federal gift and estate tax for transfers to
the donor's spouse.
- Medicaid: A joint federal and state program to provide
medical expense benefits for certain classes of low-income individuals
and families.
- Medical Savings Account: An alternative to first-dollar
coverage under a medical expense plan. An employee is given medical
expense coverage that has a high deductible, and money is deposited
into the medical spending account so that the employee can pay for
expenses below the deductible amount. Any monies not used at the end
of the year are paid to the employee.
- Medicare: The health insurance portion of the Social
Security program that is available to persons age 65 or older and
limited categories of persons under age 65.
- Medigap Policy: An individual health insurance contract
that covers certain expenses not covered by Medicare. These expenses
include such items as deductibles, copayments, and noncovered services
like prescription drugs.
- Net Payment Cost Index: A method of
estimating the net cost of life insurance on a time-value-adjusted
basis if the policy's death benefit is paid at the end of a specified
time period.
- No-Fault: A modification of the traditional tort liability
system that provides first-party benefits to injured persons and
imposes some restrictions on their rights to sue negligent parties.
- Noncancelable: An insurance contract in which the insured
has the right to renew the coverage at each policy anniversary date,
usually up to some stated age, and the coverage may not be terminated
by the insurer during the term of coverage. Also the rates for the
coverage are guaranteed in the contract, though they are not
necessarily level.
- Nonforfeiture Value: The savings element in permanent life
insurance policies. Also sometimes called the cash value.
- Nonparticipating Policy: A type of insurance policy on
which no dividends are paid to the policyowner, but it has a fixed
premium that is often lower than that of a participating policy.
- Option Renewable Policy: The company may or
may not renew the policy at each premium due date. The policy cannot
be cancelled between such dates.
- Participating Party: A life insurance
policy that distributes company surplus funds to policyholders as
dividends.
- Permanent life insurance policy: Type of life insurance
(other than term insurance) that accrues cash value and is designed
for long-term, or permanent, needs of a policyholder. Includes whole,
universal and variable life, among others.
- Personal Property Floater: A policy to provide "all-risks"
coverage for unscheduled personal property on a world-wide basis.
- Policyowner: The person or organization that owns an
insurance policy. The policyowner generally has the right to change,
renew, or cancel the policy and the obligation to comply with policy
conditions, such as premium payments.
- Preexisting Condition: An illness or condition of health
that originated prior to the issuing of the policy.
- Preferred Provider Organization (PPO): A group of health
care providers that contracts with employers, insurance companies,
union trust funds, third-party administrators, or others to provide
medical care services at a reduced fee. PPOs can be organized by the
providers themselves or by organizations such as insurance companies,
the Blues, or groups of employers.
- Premium: The price charged for a period of coverage
provided by an insurance policy and found by multiplying the rate by
the number of units of coverage.
- Presumed Negligence: Negligence that can be assumed from
the facts of certain situations. It can occur if (1) the action would
not normally cause injury without negligence, (2) the action is within
the control of the party to be held liable, and (3) the party to be
held liable has superior knowledge of the cause of the accident or the
injured party is unable to prove negligence.
- Primary Beneficiary: The beneficiary in a life insurance
policy who is first entitled to receive the policy proceeds upon the
insured's death.
- Primary Insurance Amount (PIA): The amount a worker will
receive under Social Security if he or she retires at age 65 or
becomes disabled. It is also the amount on which all other Social
Security income benefits are based.
- Real Property: Land and anything that is
growing on it, erected on it, or affixed to it, and the bundle of
rights inherent in the ownership.
- Rehabilitation Benefit: A benefit under workers'
compensation laws or disability income plans that provides
rehabilitative services for disabled workers. Benefit may be given for
medical rehabilitation and for vocational rehabilitation, including
training, counseling, and job placement.
- Replacement: The replacing of one life insurance policy
with another. To prevent financial harm to the policyowner, agents and
insurers must follow prescribed procedures.
- Rider: The term used in life insurance in place of the term
endorsement.
- Settlement Options: The ways that
policyholders or beneficiaries may choose to have benefits paid other
than a lump sum.
- Split-Dollar Life Insurance: A plan under which two
parties, usually an employer and an insured employee, share the
premium costs, death proceeds, and perhaps cash value of a life
insurance policy pursuant to a prearranged agreement.
- Stock Insurance Company: A company in which the legal
ownership and control is vested in the stockholders.
- Stock Life Insurance Company: A life insurance company
owned by stockholders who elect a board to direct the company's
management. Stock companies, in general, issue nonparticipating
insurance, but may also issue participating insurance.
- Stop-Loss Limit: The maximum amount of out-of-pocket
medical expenses that a covered person must pay in a given period
(usually one year). After this limit is reached, future copayments and
deductibles are waived for the remainder of the period.
- Subrogation: A process by which an insurer takes over the
legal rights its insured has against a responsible third party.
- Suicide Clause: A life insurance policy provision that
specifies that if the insured, whether sane or insane, commits suicide
during the first one or 2 years of the policy, the insurer will be
liable only for a return of the premium.
- Surgical Schedule: A list of the cash amounts that will be
paid for various types of surgery with the amount payable generally
based upon the seriousness of the operations.
- Term Insurance: Life insurance written for
a specific time period and payable only if the policyholder dies
within that time period.
- Time limit on certain defenses: This clause in an insurance
policy is required under state law. After two years, misstatements on
the application, (except fraudulent ones), can not be used to void the
policy or deny a claim. At the end of the two-year period, a claim may
not be denied on the grounds that a disease or physical condition, not
specifically excluded by name, had existed before the policy went into
effect.
- Title Insurance: Protection for the purchaser of real
estate against defects in title that occurred prior to the effective
date of coverage but are discovered after the effective date.
- Umbrella Liability Insurance: A personal or
business liability policy that provides high limits for a broad range
of liability situations. The policyowner is required to have
underlying liability coverage of specific amounts. Claims not covered
by the underlying insurance are subject to a self-insured retention.
- Uninsured Motorist Coverage: An automobile insurance
coverage that enables an insured to collect from his or her own
insurance company for bodily injuries (and property damage in a few
states) that are caused by a legally liable, but uninsured driver.
- Universal life insurance: A flexible life insurance policy
allowing the policyholder to change the death benefit from time to
time, and vary the amount or time of a premium payment.
- Variable Annuity: An annuity contract in
which the amount of each periodic income payment may fluctuate. The
fluctuation may be related to securities market values, a cost of
living index, or some other variable factor.
- Variable life insurance: Life insurance under which the
benefits vary, but never below a guaranteed minimum benefit, based on
the value of assets behind the contract at the time the benefit is
paid.
- Variable Universal Life Insurance: A type of life insurance
policy that combines the premium flexibility features of universal
life insurance with the policyowner--directed investment aspects of
variable life insurance.
- Whole Life: Life insurance coverage that
remains in force during the insured's entire lifetime, provided
premiums are paid as specified in the policy.
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