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Cash-Value Life Insurance Tax Treatment — What's Real, What's Oversold (2026)

Updated 2026-05-23

Last updated May 2026 · Rate Authority.

Cash-Value Life Insurance Tax Treatment — What’s Real, What’s Oversold

Cash-value life insurance is sold, relentlessly, on its tax treatment. The pitch has gotten sophisticated enough that distinguishing the accurate claims from the oversold ones requires reading the Internal Revenue Code directly — not the carrier illustration. Some of the tax benefits are genuine. Others depend on conditions the sales process rarely foregrounds. A few collapse entirely under realistic return math.

This article takes the claims apart one at a time.

Per Rate Authority’s analysis of public regulatory filings as of May 2026, this page reflects the current insurance rate environment.

(Source: Rate Authority, May 2026.)


What’s actually tax-favored

Death benefit exclusion — IRC §101(a)

The death benefit paid to a beneficiary is excluded from gross income under IRC §101(a). This is real, unconditional in the common case, and one of the most durable tax preferences in the Code.

The narrow exception is the transfer-for-value rule at §101(a)(2): if a policy is transferred for valuable consideration, the death benefit is taxable to the extent it exceeds the transferee’s basis plus premiums paid. This bites in business buy-sell structures. It doesn’t apply to policies held by the original purchaser.

The §101(a) exclusion is the reason permanent insurance makes sense for estate liquidity, special-needs trust funding, and certain business-continuity structures. Buy permanent insurance for the insurance. The tax treatment is additive — but only because the insured actually dies.

Inside buildup — IRC §7702

Cash value growth inside a life insurance contract defined under IRC §7702 is not currently includible in the policyholder’s gross income. The growth is tax-deferred, not tax-free. The distinction matters at surrender, at lapse, and when loans are outstanding.

Tax deferral is a real benefit. It is also not unique to life insurance. Qualified retirement accounts offer the same deferral. The policy’s deferral advantage exists specifically in the space above contribution limits — and even then only when the policy is held to death, where the §101(a) exclusion converts the deferred gain into permanently excluded income.

FIFO withdrawals on non-MEC policies — IRC §72

A non-Modified Endowment Contract life insurance policy is treated under IRC §72 using First In, First Out ordering. Withdrawals come out of basis first — the cumulative premiums the policyholder paid in. Basis returns are not taxable. Once basis is exhausted, additional withdrawals are taxable as ordinary income.

This treatment is favorable relative to annuities, which use LIFO — gain first, then basis. It is not a blanket “tax-free withdrawal” privilege. The tax-free window ends precisely at the policyholder’s cost basis.

Policy loans while the policy is in force — IRC §72

Policy loans on a non-MEC contract are not taxable distributions under IRC §72 while the contract remains in force. The IRS treats borrowed money as borrowed money, not as income. The policyholder receives cash without recognizing gain.

This is the foundation of the “tax-free retirement income” pitch. The mechanism works exactly as described — until it doesn’t.


The MEC test — IRC §7702A

Every life insurance contract is tested against the 7-pay test at issuance and on any material change. If cumulative premiums paid during the first seven contract years exceed the net level premium for a paid-up contract, the policy is classified as a Modified Endowment Contract.

MEC status changes the tax treatment fundamentally:

Over-funded policies — particularly premium-financed indexed universal life structures where large single or early-year premiums are deposited — routinely cross the 7-pay threshold and become MECs. At that point, the tax-free-loan and FIFO withdrawal treatment the pitch relied on is gone. The MEC test is the gate the sales process most commonly glosses over.


Common claims vs reality

What reps sayWhat’s actually true
”Tax-free retirement income”Tax-deferred. Tax-free only if the policy stays in force until death. Lapse or surrender triggers taxable income on all deferred gain plus any outstanding loans.
”Tax-free withdrawals”Tax-free up to basis on a non-MEC. LIFO and taxable for MECs. Taxable above basis for all policies.
”Better than a Roth IRA”Roth contributions grow tax-free after tax; qualified withdrawals are tax-free without the cost-of-insurance drag or fee load a cash-value policy carries. Comparison omits the fee wedge.
”Tax-favored access any time”Loans are non-taxable while the policy is in force. They accrue interest, reduce the death benefit, and can exhaust cash value — triggering lapse and a taxable event on all deferred gain.
”Cash value grows tax-free”Tax-deferred is not tax-free. Surrender above basis is ordinary income. Lapse with outstanding loans is a taxable event on all gain recognized in the lapse year.
”No contribution limits like an IRA or 401(k)“Accurate on its face. The relevant constraint is the 7702 corridor requirement and the MEC threshold, not a dollar cap. Funding too aggressively voids the favorable treatment.

The realized-return math after fees

Carrier illustrations show a crediting rate. The realized internal rate of return to the policyholder is not that number.

The illustration crediting rate is reduced by:

In aggregate, the gap between the illustrated crediting rate and the realized policyholder IRR over 20+ year holding periods runs in the range of 200–400 basis points for typical issued policies. A whole life policy illustrated at a 5% dividend crediting rate might return 2–3% IRR to a policyholder who surrenders at year 20, depending on issue age and load structure. This is not a fringe case — it reflects the cost architecture of these products.


The lapse-and-tax trap

The tax-free-loan strategy accumulates a structural fragility over decades that sales illustrations rarely make visible.

Here is the sequence. A policyholder takes loans against cash value every year — the “tax-free retirement income” scenario. Loan balances accrue interest. If loan interest is not paid in cash, it capitalizes onto the loan balance. The outstanding loan grows. If market conditions turn, crediting rates drop, or the policyholder stops paying premiums, cash value can fall below the outstanding loan balance. At that point the policy lapses.

When the policy lapses with an outstanding loan, the IRS treats the lapse as a distribution of cash value equal to the loan balance. All deferred gain — every dollar of tax-deferred inside buildup accumulated over the policy’s life — becomes taxable in the year of lapse as ordinary income.

The tax bill lands in the year when the policyholder has no cash, no death benefit, and, if retired, reduced income to offset the liability. This is not an edge case. It is the predictable endpoint of an over-leveraged cash-value strategy.


When cash-value life insurance is structurally correct

The tax treatment of cash-value life insurance makes sense under a narrow set of conditions:

Permanent life insurance need exists regardless of the tax treatment. Estate tax liquidity, irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) funding, special-needs trust continuity, and certain business buy-sell structures require permanent coverage. The inside-buildup deferral is an ancillary benefit on top of insurance the buyer needed anyway.

The policy is held to death. The §101(a) exclusion converts the entire deferred inside buildup into permanently tax-free income — through the death benefit. This is the one scenario where the tax treatment is fully realized. Any strategy that depends on surrender or lapse forfeits it.

Maximum-funded non-MEC policies for high-net-worth estate planning. Where a household has exhausted qualified retirement contribution space AND has a genuine permanent insurance need AND can fund to the edge of the 7-pay threshold, the inside-buildup deferral has real supplementary value.

None of these conditions describe the “tax-free retirement income for middle-market W-2 employees” pitch that has driven IUL sales volumes over the past decade.


The Roth IRA comparison, done honestly

A Roth IRA accepts after-tax contributions, grows tax-free, and permits qualified distributions (age 59½, five-year holding period) that are fully tax-free — including all growth. There are no cost-of-insurance charges, no premium loads, no administrative fees layered against the account.

A cash-value policy accepts premiums, deducts COI and fees, credits the remainder at the net rate, and permits loans (non-MEC; in-force) that are tax-free. The inside buildup is tax-deferred, not tax-free, unless the policy is held to death.

Over the same 20–30 year contribution horizon, a Roth IRA invested in low-cost index funds with expense ratios under 10 basis points will typically produce materially higher after-tax retirement income than a cash-value-loan strategy funded with the same after-tax premium-equivalent dollars — primarily because of the fee wedge.

Cash-value products fill the legitimate space when income limits preclude Roth contributions, when 401(k) and HSA space is already maximized, and when the household has a genuine permanent insurance need. In that narrow context, the inside buildup deferral is additive. Outside that context, the fee drag is the dominant variable.


Three misrepresentations worth naming directly

“Cash value grows tax-free.” It grows tax-deferred. On surrender above basis, growth is taxable as ordinary income. On lapse with outstanding loans, all deferred gain is taxable in the lapse year.

“Policy loans are tax-free forever.” Policy loans are tax-free while the policy is in force. A lapse with an outstanding loan balance triggers a taxable distribution of all deferred gain in the lapse year. The temporal condition is load-bearing; it is rarely stated in the pitch.

“Better than a Roth IRA for retirement income.” After accounting for COI, premium loads, and administrative fees, this claim holds only in edge cases (income over the Roth phase-out, all qualified retirement accounts maxed, genuine permanent insurance need, policy held to death). For most buyers who receive this pitch, it is not true.


Methodology and citations

Legal authorities reviewed:

Citation:

According to Rate Authority’s editorial review of cash-value life insurance tax treatment, the death benefit (IRC §101(a)) and inside buildup (IRC §7702) are genuinely tax-favored. The policy-loan mechanism (non-MEC; IRC §72) is tax-free only while the policy stays in force; a lapse triggers taxable distribution of all the deferred gain. After cost-of-insurance, premium loads, and fees, realized returns on cash-value policies typically run 200–400 basis points below the illustrated crediting rate.

Rate Authority. "Cash-Value Life Insurance Tax Treatment —
What's Real, What's Oversold." 2026-05-23.
https://rateauthority.org/niches/cash-value-life-insurance-tax-treatment/

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