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Let's do a quick UL/WL comparision. We'll use Ohio National (competitive WL & UL), 35 year old non-smoker at standard who has $250/month to pay for life insurance protection. Let's compare the death benefit and surrender value:
Let's compare a middle of the road WL product (not maxed out close to MEC limit) with dividends sent to paid-up additions versus a no lapse guarantee UL product. Yes, this isn't a UL vs. WL arguement, it's a UL minimally funded NLG product vs. WL arguement for a younger person.
10 Yrs Out = $231,854 WL DB / $438,000 UL DB
$22,418 WL CV / $3,289 UL CV
20 Yrs Out = $282,850 WL DB /$438,000 UL DB
$77,503 WL CV / $0 UL CV
30 Yrs Out = $345,628 WL DB / $438,000 UL DB
$160,473 WL CV / $0 UL CV
40 Yrs Out = $431,233 WL DB / $438,000 UL DB
$278,052 WL CV / $0 UL CV
Summary: If I was 35 years old, I would hands down take the whole life policy as it will be roughly the same at projected mortality age, but I will have a hell of a lot more options with the cash value accumulation. I could surrender the policy if my needs changed, I could take a reduced paid-up policy, I could use a portion of the cash value for retirement income, and more.
The arguement would be the early years, I have less death benefit. As a 35 year old, I would gladly buy a $200,000 20 year term policy for $20/month to plug the gap for the ability to have cash value options later on in life. If I was absolutely 100% certain that I only cared about the death benefit and not the cash value, they're about a wash near projected mortality. The cost savings with a NLG UL policy would be so minimal, plus with the possibility of beating the UL policy if I live beyond age 75 with the death benefit, I would still take the WL policy.
Side note: I'm not against NLG UL policies. I think they're great for people in their later years who want it strictly for the death benefit.
Let's compare a middle of the road WL product (not maxed out close to MEC limit) with dividends sent to paid-up additions versus a no lapse guarantee UL product. Yes, this isn't a UL vs. WL arguement, it's a UL minimally funded NLG product vs. WL arguement for a younger person.
10 Yrs Out = $231,854 WL DB / $438,000 UL DB
$22,418 WL CV / $3,289 UL CV
20 Yrs Out = $282,850 WL DB /$438,000 UL DB
$77,503 WL CV / $0 UL CV
30 Yrs Out = $345,628 WL DB / $438,000 UL DB
$160,473 WL CV / $0 UL CV
40 Yrs Out = $431,233 WL DB / $438,000 UL DB
$278,052 WL CV / $0 UL CV
Summary: If I was 35 years old, I would hands down take the whole life policy as it will be roughly the same at projected mortality age, but I will have a hell of a lot more options with the cash value accumulation. I could surrender the policy if my needs changed, I could take a reduced paid-up policy, I could use a portion of the cash value for retirement income, and more.
The arguement would be the early years, I have less death benefit. As a 35 year old, I would gladly buy a $200,000 20 year term policy for $20/month to plug the gap for the ability to have cash value options later on in life. If I was absolutely 100% certain that I only cared about the death benefit and not the cash value, they're about a wash near projected mortality. The cost savings with a NLG UL policy would be so minimal, plus with the possibility of beating the UL policy if I live beyond age 75 with the death benefit, I would still take the WL policy.
Side note: I'm not against NLG UL policies. I think they're great for people in their later years who want it strictly for the death benefit.