Your Life Insurance and Its Living Benefits
July 2, 2026


How Your Policy Can Work for You Right Now
When most people think about life insurance, they picture one thing: a check that goes to their loved ones after they're gone. And that is the main job of a life insurance policy—delivering a meaningful cash benefit to your beneficiaries when you pass away.
Here's what a lot of people don't realize: today's life insurance policies can potentially have even more flexible benefits than that. Depending on your insurance company and the type of policy you own, your coverage can become a financial asset that helps you and your family reach all kinds of goals while you're still alive. These are called living benefits, and they're important to understand.
Let's look at what your policy might be able to do for you.
Cash Value: A Quiet Pool of Money That Grows
If you own a permanent life insurance policy (as opposed to term insurance, which expires), part of what you pay into that policy builds up over time as cash value.
The nice part is that this growth is generally tax-deferred, meaning you don't owe taxes on the gains as long as they stay inside the policy. It works something like a retirement account in that sense—your money grows without the drag of annual taxes.
Over the years, that cash value can become substantial. And unlike most retirement accounts, there's no strict age requirement to access it. That flexibility is what makes it such a useful tool.
Borrowing: Easy Access to Cash When You Need It
Here's a benefit people tend to love once they understand it. You can borrow against your policy, up to its cash value, at a relatively low interest rate—without a credit check, income verification, or lengthy approval process.
The loan doesn't have a fixed repayment schedule, either. You can repay it on your own terms. Interest accumulates on what you borrow, but there's no outside lender pressuring you for monthly payments.
If you're wondering what happens if you never repay it: the outstanding loan balance plus interest is simply deducted from the death benefit when you pass away. Your beneficiaries receive a smaller payout, which is crucial to understand before borrowing. You would only want to consider this option if you are confident in your ability to repay it.
This kind of access—on your schedule, without credit scrutiny—can be valuable in situations like covering a medical expense, bridging a gap in income, or funding a major purchase.
Cash Value: Withdrawals (What You Should Know First)
A withdrawal is exactly what it sounds like: you take money directly out of the cash value and keep it. You simply request it from your insurance company. There's no application or approval process like a loan, because it's your own money. People use withdrawals for all kinds of things: covering an unexpected expense, supplementing income, or freeing up cash for another goal.
A few things are helpful to understand before you do it:
- Up to what you've paid in, it's usually tax-free. The total of the premiums you've contributed is called your "basis." You can generally withdraw up to that amount without owing taxes, because the government treats it as getting your own money back. Pull out more than your basis, and the gains on top are typically taxable.
- A withdrawal is permanent. Unlike a loan against the policy (which you can repay to restore your cash value), money you withdraw is gone from the policy for good.
- It usually shrinks your death benefit. Taking cash out generally reduces the amount your beneficiaries will eventually receive, often dollar-for-dollar. It's a literal trade-off to be weighed.
Dividends: Your Share of the Profits
Certain types of permanent life insurance—particularly whole life policies from mutual insurance companies—pay dividends. Think of it as your share of the company's profits, returned to you as a policyholder.
When dividends are paid, you typically have several options for what to do with them:
- Use them to reduce your premium payments
- Let them accumulate inside the policy (earning interest)
- Purchase additional paid-up coverage, which grows your death benefit and cash value
- Withdraw them as cash
The tax treatment is friendly: dividends you withdraw are tax-free, because the government treats them as a return of premiums you already paid.
One honest caveat: dividends aren't guaranteed. Many companies have paid them every single year for generations, but insurers can have an off year. If that happens, a dividend may not come through.
Trading Your Policy for Guaranteed Income
Many people buy life insurance when they're young and raising a family, then reach a stage where they simply don't need the coverage anymore. What they do want is steady, guaranteed income.
The tax code has you covered here. Under Section 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code, you can exchange your permanent life insurance policy for an annuity without triggering capital gains or income taxes on the swap. The same rule lets you exchange one life insurance policy for a different one, tax-free.
It's a way to repurpose an asset you no longer need into one that fits your life today—without a tax bill along the way.
A Flexible Supplement to Your Retirement Income
Some permanent policies can serve as an additional retirement income tool—sometimes called life insurance retirement plans, or LIRPs. Here's how it works in practice:
You contribute to a specially structured policy over your working years, letting the cash value accumulate on a tax-deferred basis. In retirement, you pull money out through policy loans rather than withdrawals. Because loans aren't taxable income, you can create a stream of income that doesn't show up on your tax return—potentially lowering your tax bracket and avoiding triggers like higher Medicare premiums or taxation of Social Security benefits.
This strategy works best when the policy is designed correctly from the start and funded consistently. It's not for everyone, but for people who have maxed out other tax-advantaged accounts, it can be worth exploring.
One thing to note: for the tax advantages to hold, the policy generally can't lapse. Keeping it in force is important, and working with a knowledgeable advisor is essential. The income you generate must come from loans or dividend withdrawals, as covered earlier.
The Bottom Line
Life insurance is, first and foremost, protection for the people you love after you are gone. But a permanent policy can also be a living, working asset—one that builds value, offers easy access to cash, adapts as your needs change, and even helps fund your retirement.
Whether your policy includes all of these features depends on your insurer and the type of coverage you own, so it's worth sitting down with a life insurance professional to understand exactly how permanent life insurance can work for you.
Note: This article is for general educational purposes and isn't personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Policy features, tax rules, and dividend practices vary by company and can change over time. Before making any decisions, talk with your insurance professional.








