This section has been introduced to provide users with
help on some common Life Insurance terminology. We could
add words to this glossary based on your comments and suggestions.
Accidental Death and Dismemberment
Insurance providing payment if the insider's death
results from an accident or if the insured accidentally
severs a limb above the wrist or ankle joints or
totally and irreversibly loses his or her eyesight.
Accidental Death Benefit Rider
A life insurance policy rider providing for payment
of an additional benefit related to the face amount
of the base policy when death occurs by accidental
means.
Annuities
A series of payments made or received at regular
intervals.
Assignment
The transfer of some or all rights of ownership
in a policy.
Back Dating
The practice of making a policy effective at an
earlier date than the present.
Beneficiary
Person to whom the proceeds of a life policy are
payable when the insured dies.
Cash Value
The equity amount or "savings" accumulation
in a life insurance policy.
Cede
To transfer an insurance risk from the Company originally
issuing the policy to another insurance company known
as the reinsurer.
Concealment
Failure of the insured to disclose to the company
a fact material to the acceptance of the risk at the
time application is made.
Critical Illness Contract
Under this contract a policyholder is paid an agreed
sum if he contracts any of a number of specified serious
illnesses as stipulated in the contract. Illnesses
typically covered include cancer, strokes, heart attacks,
multiple sclerosis and kidney failure is made.
Evidence of Insurability
Any statement or proof of a person's physical condition
and occupation affecting acceptance of the applicant
for insurance.
Exclusions
Specified hazards listed in a policy for which benefits
will not be paid.
Extended Term Insurance Option
An option under which a policy may continue for its
full face amount even after premium payments are discontinued.
The duration for which coverage is provided under
this option depends on the available cash value of
the policy.
Free Look Period
An individual life insurance provision that grants
the insured the right to rescind the insurance contract
within a given period after the policy is actually
delivered to the insured.
Grace Period
Period of time after the due date of a premium during
which the policy remains in force without penalty.
Incontestable Clause
Provides that, for certain reasons such as misstatements
on the application, the company may void a life policy
after it has been in force during the insured's lifetime,
usually one or two years after issue.
Insurability
All conditions pertaining to individuals that affect
their health, susceptibility to injury and life expectancy;
an individual's risk profile.
Insurable Interest
A person has an insurable interest in another’s
life if he or she can reasonably expect to benefit
from that person’s continued life, and, conversely,
if he or she would suffer financial loss on the person’s
death. This is a basic requirement of a life insurance
contract without which the contract is not valid.
Insurance
Social device for minimizing risk of uncertainty regarding
loss by spreading the risk over a large enough number
of similar exposures to predict the individual chance
of loss.
nsured
The person whose life is insured by a life insurance
policy.
Insurer
Party that provides insurance coverage, typically
through a contract of insurance.
Lapse
Termination of a policy upon the policy owner's failure
to pay the premium within the grace period.
Life Expectancy
The average number of years of life remaining for
a group of people of a given age and gender according
to a particular mortality table.
Medical
A document completed by a physician or another approved
examiner and submitted to an insurer to supply medical
evidence of insurability (or lack of insurability)
or in relation to a claim.
Morbidity
The relative incidence of disease within a given group.
Mortality
The relative incidence of death within a given group.
Morbidity Tables
These are statistical tables used by life and health
insurance companies showing the probability of disease
of males and females at all ages.
Mortality Tables
These are statistical table used by life insurance
companies showing the probability of death of males
and females at all ages.
Misrepresentation
An untrue statement of a fact.
Non-Medical Insurance
Issued on a regular basis without requiring a regular
medical examination. In passing on the risk, the company
relies on the applicant's answers to questions regarding
his or her physical condition and on personal references
or inspection reports.
Paid up
A policy condition under which no further premiums
are payable and the coverage continues, usually for
reduced benefits. This may be an automatic policy
condition invoked by the insurer if renewal premiums
are not paid, or could be a voluntary selection by
a life assured.
Pension
A regular annuity payment, generally after retirement,
to a person that is intended to allow him to subsist
without working.
Premium
The periodic payment required to keep and insurance
policy in force.
Proposal Form
The initial application form for insurance filled
by a prospective life assured. This form requires
details such as name, address, occupation, financial
worth, medical history etc and is the basis of an
insurance contract.
Quota Share Arrangement
A reinsurance arrangement where the total risk is
shared between the insurer and the reinsurer in a
specified percentage, such as 75%:25% (where the insurer
retains 75% of the risk, and the reinsurer assumes
25% of the risk)
Reinsurance
The arrangement under which a part of the risk is
transferred from the company originally issuing the
policy (the insurer) to another insurance company
known as the reinsurer.
Reinsurance Treaty
A detailed legal contract defining the reinsurance
agreement between an insurer and reinsurer.
Reinstatement
Putting a lapsed policy back in force by producing
satisfactory evidence of insurability and paying any
past-due premiums required.
Retention
The amount or percentage of each risk retained by
the insurer under a reinsurance agreement.
Rider
Strictly speaking, a rider adds something to a policy.
However, the term is used loosely to refer to any
supplemental agreement attached to and made a part
of the policy, whether the policy's conditions are
expanded and additional coverage's added, or a coverage
or condition is waived.
Standard Risk
Person who, according to a company's underwriting
standards, is entitled to insurance protection without
extra rating or special restrictions.
Sub-Standard Risk
Person who is considered an under-average or impaired
insurance risk because of physical condition, family
or personal history of disease, occupation, residence
in unhealthy climate or dangerous habits.
Sum Assured
Commonly used to refer to the principal sum involved
in the contract.
Surplus Arrangement
A reinsurance arrangement where the amount of risk
above a certain limit is transferred to the reinsurer,
such as Rs. 350,000 (where the insurer retains all
risks up to Rs. 350,000 and the reinsurer assumes
the excess risk over this amount).
Term Insurance
Protection during limited number of years; expiring
without value if the insured survives the stated period,
which may be one or more years but usually is five
to twenty years, because such periods usually cover
the needs for temporary protection.
Term of Policy
Period for which the policy runs.
Underwriting
A process by which insurers select and classify individual
risk based on factors such as age, sex, occupation,
health etc.
Unilateral
A distinguishing characteristic of a life insurance
contract in that it is only the insurance company
that pledges anything. The policy owner does not even
promise to pay premiums; therefore, it is really a
one-sided contract favoring the policy owner.
Uninsurable Risk
One not acceptable for insurance due to excessive
risk.
Waiver of Premium
Rider or provision included in most life insurance
policies exempting the insured from paying premiums
after he or she has been disabled for a specified
period of time, usually six months.