What Is a Participating Life Insurance Policy?

A participating life insurance policy is a life insurance contract that offers the potential for dividend payments.

Published Dec 4, 2023 9:34 a.m. PST · 1 min read Written by Robin Hartill, CFP®

Robin Hartill, CFP®
Writer | Personal finance, life insurance, budgeting

Robin Hartill, CFP®, is a freelance writer who covers life, pet and homeowners insurance for NerdWallet. She holds a bachelor's degree in English from the University of Florida. With more than 15 years of writing and editing experience, Robin enjoys breaking down complex financial topics for readers to help them make smart decisions about money. She is based in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Reviewed by Tony Steuer Life insurance expert

Tony Steuer
Life insurance expert | Life Insurance

Tony Steuer is a financial wellness advocate, podcaster and speaker, and the author of "Questions and Answers on Life Insurance." His advice has been featured in media outlets including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Fast Company, Forbes and CNBC. He has a bachelor of science degree in finance from California State University and holds the following designations: Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU), Life and Disability Insurance Analyst (LA) and Certified Personal and Family Finance Educator (CPFFE).

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Assigning Editor Lisa Green
Assigning Editor | Insurance, data journalism

Lisa Green leads the life insurance team and oversees insurance-focused data journalism at NerdWallet. A professional journalist since high school, she was an insurance writer at NerdWallet before becoming an assigning editor. Previously, Lisa spent more than 20 years as an editor at The Tennessean in Nashville, where she led business and consumer coverage for several years. At The Tennessean, she was part of a 2011 Pulitzer Prize finalist team for coverage of devastating floods in Middle Tennessee. Her work has also won awards from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing, Investigative Reporters and Editors, and the Society of Professional Journalists. Lisa is an alumna of the Wharton Seminars for Business Journalists at the University of Pennsylvania. She has also studied data journalism with the National Institute for Computer-Assisted Reporting, business editing with the American Press Institute and writing, editing and news research with the Poynter Institute. In addition to her work at NerdWallet, Lisa is a real estate investor and has taught a seminar on how to earn college scholarships. She is based in Nashville.

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A participating life insurance policy is a type of life insurance that pays dividends to policyholders when the insurer has surplus funds. Sometimes, participating life insurance is called dividend-paying life insurance.

An insurance carrier may have extra funds because its investments performed well, it had to pay out fewer death benefits than it projected or it found ways to cut expenses. If the insurer’s board of directors decides at the end of the business year that it doesn’t need the extra money, it may distribute part of the surplus to policyholders as dividends. However, dividends aren’t guaranteed when purchasing a participating life insurance policy. [0]

New York State Department of Financial Services . Types Of Life Insurance Policies. Accessed Dec 1, 2023.

Participating life insurance policies are typically whole life insurance contracts. Whole life insurance is a type of permanent life insurance, meaning the coverage lasts your entire life. These policies often feature a cash value component that functions like a savings account.

Because it offers permanent coverage and accumulates cash value, whole life insurance is significantly more expensive than term life insurance , which pays a death benefit only if you die during a specified period. A participating whole life insurance policy typically costs even more than a nonparticipating whole life insurance policy (which doesn’t offer dividends) because of those dividend payments.

Mutual life companies are most likely to issue participating life insurance policies. Unlike stock insurance companies, which are publicly traded and owned by shareholders, a mutual life insurance company is owned by policyholders.

According to the American Council of Life Insurers, about 70% of the face value of individual life insurance policies issued in 2021 were nonparticipating policies. [0]

American Council of Life Insurers . ACLI 2022 Life Insurers Fact Book. Accessed Dec 4, 2023.

To buy a participating life insurance policy, look for whole life insurance that’s offered by a mutual life company, rather than a stock life insurance company. If you have an existing policy and you’re not sure whether it’s participating or nonparticipating, check your policy documents or contact your insurer directly.

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