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Definitions
- E
Earned
Premium
That portion of
a policy's premium payment for which the protection of the policy
has already been given. For example, an insurance company is considered
to have earned 75 percent of an annual premium after a period
of nine months of an annual term has elapsed.
Economic
Policy
Special type of
participating whole life insurance in which the dividends are
used to buy term insurance or paid-up additions equal to the difference
between the face amount of the policy and some guaranteed amount.
Education
Fund
One of the uses of life insurance. It is designed to provide
money for a child's education should the breadwinner of the family
die.
Effective
Date
The date on which the insurance under a policy begins.
Electronic
Funds Transfer (EFT)
A transaction that allows payers to have premium payments
drawn directly from their bank accounts, eliminating the need
to write checks.
Eligibility
Date
The date on which
an individual member of a specified group becomes eligible to
apply for insurance under the (group life or health) insurance
plan.
Eligibility
Period
A specified length
of time, frequently 31 days, following the eligibility date during
which an individual member of a particular group will remain eligible
to apply for insurance under a group life or health insurance
policy without evidence of insurability.
Elimination
Period
The period of time between
the date the illness or disability commences and the beginning
of the benefit payment period. It is sometimes referred to as
the Qualifying Period.
Emergency
Fund
One of the uses of life insurance which provides money for
the emergency expenses of a deceased's family prior to the final
settlement of the estate.
Endorsement
An additional piece of paper, not a part of the original contract,
which cites certain terms and which, when attached to the original
contract, becomes a legal part of that contract.
Endow
When an insurance policy's guaranteed cash value equals the
initial death benefit, it is said to "endow" or mature.
Whole Life contracts typically endow at the insured's age 100.
Endowment
Insurance
An insurance policy that pays a stated amount at the end of
a specified period or upon the death of the insured if it occurs
within that period.
Entity
Plan
The arrangement whereby the business, rather than an individual
owner, purchases the insurance that will be used to secure the
business in the event of an owner's death.
Estate
Planning
Planning for the orderly handling and administration of an
estate upon the death of the owner. This usually involves drawing
up a will and setting up trusts and insurance, with the intention
of minimizing loss to the estate value incurred by estate taxes
and administrative expenses.
Evidence
of Insurability
Any statement of proof of a person's physical condition and/or
other factual information affecting his/her acceptance for insurance.
Examiner
A physician appointed by the medical director of a life insurer
to examine applicants.
Exclusion
Provision that indicates a circumstance or event, such as
an act of war, for which benefits will not be paid.
Executive
Bonus Plan
A plan whereby an employee owns a life insurance policy that
was purchased, all or in part, by the employer. The employee treats
the employer's payments as reportable income for tax purposes.
The employer deducts its payments as compensation. Also known
as an Employee Bonus Plan.
Expected
Mortality
The number of deaths which theoretically will occur among
a group of people during a given period of time, according to
the mortality table in use.
Expense
Charges
The charges assessed against a policy to cover part or all
of the insurance company's acquisition and maintenance expenses
related to issuing and servicing the policy, including charges
covering various federal, state and local taxes.
Expiration
Date or Expiry
The date on which the insurance policy ceases to protect the
policyowner.
Extra
Premium or Extra Percentage Table
The amount charged in addition to the regular rate to cover
any extra hazard or special risk. Usually this premium is shown
as a percentage of the standard premium. A form of Sub-Standard
Risk rating.
Some whole life
policies let you pay premiums for a shorter period such as 20
years, or until age 65. Premiums for these policies are higher
since the premium payments are made during a shorter period.
Quick Life
Insurance Terms Glossary
(some definitions
taken from the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners' Life Insurance Buyers
Guide)
LIFE
IS COMPLICATED....
BUT TERM LIFE INSURANCE DOES NOT HAVE TO BE.
Privacy
Statement | Legal Statement | Licenses
Privacy statement: Your privacy is
important to us. Advantage
Quote Life Insurance will keep all
the information gathered strictly confidential. Your personal
information will not be used for any other purpose or given to
anyone else.
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