Life Assurance or Life Insurance, is a type of insurance policy where the insured element is contingent upon human life.
The term life insurance is common in the U.S., where the term life assurance is common in the UK. Although these terms are often used interchangeably there is a difference in meaning which is discussed below.
Life based contracts tend to fall into two major categories:
Insured events that may be covered include:
Life policies are typically presented as types legal contracts and the terms of the contract describe the limitations of the insured events. Specific exclusions are often written into the contract to limit the liability of the insurer; for example claims relating to war, riot and civil commotion.
It is a general principle that life contracts are written on the basis of utmost good faith. That is, the proposer and the insurer both accept that the other is acting in good faith. In practice this means the proposer can assume the contract offers what is shown prima facie without having to fine comb the small print and the insurer assumes the proposer is being honest when providing details to underwriter.
When a person insures their life they do so knowing that one day they will die. Therefore a policy that covers death is assured to make a payment. The policy offers assurance on death; even if the policy has prescribed termination date the policy is still assured to pay on death and therefore is an assurance policy. Examples include Term assurance and Whole of life assurance. An accidental death policy is not assured to pay on death as the life insured may not die through an accident, therefore it is an insurance policy.
A policy might also be assured for other reasons. For example an endowment policy is designed to provide a lump sum on maturity. Under certain types of policy the lump sum is guaranteed. Therefore, this may also be called an assurance policy.
The test of whether a policy is assurance or insurance is that with an assurance policy the insured event will definitely occur (at some point) whereas with an insurance policy there is a risk the insured event might occur.
Some policies allow the policyholder to participate in the profits of the insurance company these are with-profits policies. Other policies have no rights to participate in the profits of the company, these are non-profit policies.
With-profits policies are used as a form of collective investment to achieve capital growth. Other policies offer a guaranteed return not dependent on the companies underlying investment performance; these are often referred to as without-profit policies which may be construed as a misnomer.
A pension fund will be built up throughout a person's working life. When the person retires, the pension will become in payment, and at some stage the pensioner will buy an annuity contract, which will guarantee a certain pay-out each month until death.
Non-investment life policies do not normally attract either income tax or capital gains tax on claim. If the policy has as investment element such as an endowment policy, whole of life policy or an investment bond then the tax treatment is determined by the qualifying status of the policy.
Qualifying status is determined at the outset of the policy if the contract meets certain criteria. Essentially, long term contracts (10 years plus) tend to be qualifying policies and the proceeds are free from income tax and capital gains tax. Single premium contracts and those run for a short term are subject to income tax depending upon your marginal rate in the year you make a gain. All (UK) insurers pay a special rate of corporation tax on the profits form their life book; this is deemed as meeting the basic rate (22% in 2005-06) laibility for policyholders. Therefore if you are a higher rate taxpayer (40% in 2005-06 ),or become one through the transaction, you must pay tax on the gain at the difference between the higher and the basic rate. This gain may be reduced by applying a complicated calculation called top-slicing based on the number of years you have held the policy.
Although this may seem complicated the taxation of life assurance based investment contracts is broadly deemed beneficial compared to alternative equity based collective investment schemes (unit trusts, investment trusts and OEICs). One feature which especially favours investment bonds is the ability to draw 5% of the original investment amount each policy year without being subject to any taxation on the amount withdrawn. The withdrawal is deemed by HMRC (Her Majesties Revenue and Customs) to be a payment of capital and therefore the tax calculation is defered until further encashment above the 5% limit. This is an especially useful tax planning tool for higher rate taxpayers who expect to become basic rate taxpayers at some predictable point in the future (e.g. retirement).
The proceeds of a life policy will be included in the estate for inheritance tax (IHT) purposes. Policies written in trust may fall outside the estate for IHT purposes but it's not always that simple. If in doubt you should seek profession advice from an IFA (Independent Financial Adviser) who is registered with the government regulator: the Financial Services Authority.
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