What is an indexed universal life (IUL) policy?
An indexed universal life policy is permanent life insurance with flexible premiums and a cash value account. Each year the insurer credits interest to that cash value based on the movement of a market index. You never own the index itself, and the policy is not an investment or a savings account.
Here is the basic plumbing. You pay premiums. The insurer deducts the cost of the insurance itself, plus administrative and other policy charges. Whatever remains goes into your cash value. The insurer then applies a crediting formula: when the chosen index rises over the crediting period, your cash value earns an interest credit based on part of that rise. When the index falls, your credit for that period is typically 0%, not a loss on the credit itself.
That last sentence is why IULs get pitched so hard. It is also where most of the fine print lives, so we will walk through it slowly. If you are weighing an IUL against an annuity, it helps to first read our plain-English guide to what an annuity actually is, because the two get blurred together in sales presentations and they are very different contracts.
What is the genuinely strong benefit of an IUL?
The strongest, cleanest benefit of an IUL is the death benefit. When you die with the policy in force, the death benefit generally passes to your beneficiaries free of federal income tax under Section 101 of the Internal Revenue Code. That is a real, statutory advantage, and for families with a genuine legacy goal it can be the whole reason the policy exists.
Two honest caveats belong right next to that claim. First, the policy must actually be in force when you die. A policy that lapsed in your eighties because the costs outran the cash value pays nothing. Second, income tax free is not the same as estate tax free. For larger estates, the death benefit can still count toward the taxable estate unless the policy is owned outside it, which is why estate attorneys sometimes pair an IUL with a trust. That is planning territory for a licensed professional, not a brochure.
How does the cash value grow, and what do the caps and fees take away?
Cash value growth inside an IUL is tax-deferred. You do not receive an annual tax bill on interest credits that stay inside the policy. Note the word carefully: growth is tax-deferred, not tax-free. What you keep is shaped by a floor on the downside and a set of limits on the upside.
The floor first. In a period when the index falls, your index credit is typically floored at 0%. Your credit does not go negative. That protection is a promise from the insurance company, backed by the claims-paying ability of the issuing insurer. It is not FDIC-insured and not bank-guaranteed.
Now the part the glossy illustration underplays. The floor is not free. It is paid for by limits on your upside, and the insurer controls those dials:
- Caps put a ceiling on the credit you can earn in a strong index year, no matter how far the index climbed.
- Participation rates mean you may earn credit on only a portion of the index gain rather than all of it.
- Spreads subtract a slice off the top of the index gain before your credit is calculated.
- Fees never take a year off. The cost of insurance and policy charges are deducted every year, including 0% years, so your cash value can fall in a flat or down year even with the floor.
What the floor protects, and what it does not
One more thing, and it matters more than any of the dials above: caps, participation rates, and spreads are set by the insurer and can change after you buy. The numbers in the sales illustration are hypothetical, not guaranteed. Always ask to see a mid and low scenario, not just the sunny one.
Is "tax-free retirement income" from an IUL real?
The "tax-free retirement income" in IUL presentations is not income in the usual sense. It is a sequence of withdrawals up to what you paid in, followed by policy loans against your own cash value. The tax result depends entirely on the policy staying in force for the rest of your life.
Here is the full mechanism, stated plainly:
- Step one, withdrawals to basis. You can generally withdraw up to the total premiums you paid without income tax, because it is your own money coming back.
- Step two, policy loans. Beyond basis, you borrow against the cash value. Loans are not taxed while the policy remains in force, which is where the "tax-free" language comes from.
- Loans are not free money. Every loan reduces your cash value and your death benefit, and loan interest accrues whether or not you pay it.
- The lapse trap. If loans plus policy costs outrun the remaining cash value, the policy can lapse. A lapse or surrender of a policy carrying a gain converts that untaxed gain into taxable income in a single year, often with no cash left in the policy to pay the bill.
This is also why an IUL belongs in the tax-advantaged bucket of a plan only with an asterisk. Our guide to the retirement tax picture shows where that bucket sits next to taxable and tax-deferred accounts, and why tax diversification is a goal rather than a promise.
Where is the 7-pay MEC line, and why does it matter?
The tax code draws a hard line through every cash value policy, called the 7-pay test, under Section 7702A. If you put in more premium during the policy's first seven years than the test allows, the policy becomes a Modified Endowment Contract, a MEC, and the friendly tax treatment above changes permanently.
In a MEC, withdrawals and loans are taxed gain first, meaning the taxable earnings come out before your own basis does. A 10% federal penalty can also apply to taxable amounts taken before age 59½. The death benefit generally stays income tax free, but the "access your cash value on favorable terms" story is largely gone, and MEC status cannot be undone.
Why bring this up so early? Because the popular pitch is to "overfund" an IUL, paying in far more than the minimum so the cash value grows faster. Done carefully, overfunding stays under the 7-pay line. Done carelessly, it crosses the line and quietly rewrites the tax rules on your policy. Any agent proposing an overfunded design should show you, in writing, how the funding schedule stays on the right side of the MEC test.
Who can an IUL fit, and who should walk away?
An IUL is a specialist tool, not a default. It tends to earn its keep for a fairly narrow group of people, and it tends to disappoint nearly everyone else. Here is our honest read of both lists.
An IUL can be worth a serious look if most of these describe you:
- You are already maxing your other tax-advantaged accounts, such as a 401(k), IRA, or Roth, and still have savings capacity left over.
- You have a permanent need for a death benefit or a clear legacy goal, so the life insurance itself has value to you.
- You can fund the policy properly for many years, through good markets and bad, without straining your budget.
- You want a tax-diversified third bucket and you accept that it comes wrapped in an insurance contract with insurance costs.
An IUL is probably the wrong fit, and we would say walk away, if any of these are true:
- You may need this money back in the early years. Surrender charges and front-loaded costs make early exits expensive.
- Your main goal is market growth. Owning investments directly is the more direct route, without insurance charges in the way.
- You only need coverage for a limited period. Term life insurance usually covers a temporary need at a fraction of the cost.
- Dependable lifetime income is the actual goal. That is an annuity conversation, not an IUL one. Start with our guide to guaranteed lifetime income.
- The pitch you heard leaned on a best-case illustration, "be your own bank," or "tax-free money forever." Those are sales lines, not features of the contract.
What optional riders may an IUL include?
Many IUL policies may include optional living-benefit riders, usually at an additional cost. The most common are chronic-illness or accelerated death benefit riders under Section 101(g) of the tax code, which may let you receive part of your own death benefit early if you meet the policy's qualifying medical triggers.
Read those riders with clear eyes. The triggers are strict and defined by the contract, not by how sick you feel. The rider itself carries a charge. And every dollar accelerated reduces the death benefit your beneficiaries receive, dollar for dollar. A rider like this can be a useful backstop, but it is not long-term care insurance, and no honest presentation should ever call it "free long-term care coverage."
How does an IUL compare with a Roth IRA and a deferred annuity?
People rarely shop for an IUL in a vacuum. It usually competes with a Roth IRA for the "tax-advantaged bucket" job and with a deferred fixed annuity for the "safe insurance product" job. The honest comparison, with no numbers and no favorites:
| Question | Indexed universal life | Roth IRA | Deferred fixed annuity |
|---|---|---|---|
| What is it? | Permanent life insurance with a cash value account. Not an investment. | A retirement account you own and control, invested however you choose. | An insurance contract built for tax-deferred growth or future income. |
| How is growth taxed? | Tax-deferred while inside the policy. Never call it tax-free. | Qualified withdrawals of earnings are generally tax free once the age and holding rules are met. | Tax-deferred. Gains are taxed as ordinary income when withdrawn. |
| How do you get money out? | Withdrawals up to basis, then policy loans. The policy must stay in force or the tax story unravels. | Contributions can come out anytime. Earnings follow the age 59½ and five-year rules. | Withdrawals or annuitized income. Surrender charges can apply early, and a 10% federal penalty can apply before 59½. |
| Fine-print risk to respect | Lapse can trigger a tax bill on the gain. MEC rules limit funding. Insurance costs rise with age. Caps can change. | Income limits and contribution caps restrict how much you can put in each year. | Long surrender periods. Guarantees rest on the claims-paying ability of the issuing insurer, not the FDIC. |
| What do heirs receive? | A death benefit that is generally free of federal income tax. | The account itself, under inherited IRA distribution rules. | The contract value or a death benefit. Any untaxed gain is taxable to the beneficiary. |
Educational comparison only, not advice. Product features vary by contract and state. For how insurance products stack up against bank instruments, see our annuity vs CD comparison, and for the annuity landscape itself, our guide to the types of annuities.
What should you ask before buying an IUL?
If you take one thing from this page, take this list into any IUL meeting. A good agent will answer all of it happily, in writing. Evasion on any item is your cue to slow down.
- Show me this illustration at a mid and a low crediting scenario, not just the default. How does the policy hold up?
- What are the current cap, participation rate, and spread, and how often can the insurer change them after I buy?
- What are the guaranteed minimums in the contract itself, as opposed to the illustrated values?
- Exactly which charges come out of my premium and cash value each year, and how does the cost of insurance change as I age?
- How is this funding schedule designed to stay under the 7-pay MEC limit, and who monitors that over time?
- If I take loans in retirement, what happens to the policy in a long stretch of 0% credit years? At what point could it lapse?
- What does each optional rider cost, what exactly triggers it, and how does using it reduce the death benefit?
- What is the surrender schedule, year by year, and what would I walk away with if I quit in year five?
- Why is this better for me than finishing the job of maxing my Roth, IRA, and 401(k) first?
- How are you compensated on this sale?
If you want a structured way to think about the whole decision, not just this product, our self-check guide Is an annuity right for me? walks through the same honest questions from the top, and our editorial standards explain how we fact-check every page.