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Can you cash out your life insurance policy?

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Life insurance policy and currency on a table.
Depending on the type of life insurance policy you have, you may be able to dip into it for its cash value.

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Feeling the added pressures of inflation and overall challenging economic conditions on their finances, many Americans may be looking for some added financial assistance. For some, that could mean tapping into their life insurance policies for cash.

Before you make the choice to cash out your life insurance, it’s important to understand all of the details. Then, you can weigh both the advantages and disadvantages of this strategy to determine if getting cash out of your life insurance policy makes sense for you.

If you don’t have life insurance, or want to increase the amount you currently have, start by getting a free price quote now.

Can you cash out your life insurance? 

Depending on the type of insurance you carry, you may have a few options to access cash from your life insurance.

Access a permanent life insurance policy

If you have a permanent life insurance policy, you may be able to dip into your policy’s cash value account. Whole life, universal life and variable universal life are types of permanent life insurance policies that never expire and maintain cash value in addition to a death benefit.

By contrast, term life insurance is in effect for a limited term, such as 10, 20 or 30 years. The policy has a death benefit which pays beneficiaries if the policyholder passes away during the term. But one of the most significant differences between whole and term life insurance is that the latter policy does not have a cash value account, so there’s no cash for policyholders to access.

Taking money from your cash value account could make sense if you’re in a strong financial position and your beneficiaries will be taken care of after your death. On the other hand, if you have loved ones who rely on you financially, it’s probably not wise to pull away the financial safety net your life insurance provides.

Get a free price estimate today to see what life insurance protections you’re eligible for.

Surrender your life insurance policy

This option allows you to withdraw the entire cash value of your life insurance policy, which in turn surrenders your coverage. You’ll receive all the money you’ve paid towards your coverage and any interest you’ve earned. Again, you should make sure you’re in good financial standing and your beneficiaries are covered before you decide on this option.

Your insurer also considers any unpaid loans or premiums on your account and you could owe surrender fees and federal taxes.

Make a withdrawal from your policy

Another potential option is to withdraw money from your life insurance policy’s cash value account. While these withdrawals are tax-free up to the amount you’ve already paid towards your premiums, any amount you withdraw that exceeds what you’ve already paid is taxable. 

Borrow from your policy

Your life insurance policy may allow you to take out a loan on the cash value. Getting a loan from your insurance policy may be easier than through a bank or credit union, because there is typically no credit check and more flexible repayment terms. But remember: Any amount you owe on the loan’s outstanding principal and interest is deducted from the death benefit when you die.

Cover your policy’s monthly payments

If you need cash to meet other expenses, you may have the option of drawing on your cash value account to cover the policy premium. This option can help you get through a tough financial spot without forfeiting your policy. Remember, if you end up depleting your cash value, your insurance could lapse, thus ending your coverage.

Pros and cons of cashing out your life insurance

Weigh the advantages and disadvantages of getting cash from your life insurance to help you decide if it makes sense for you. 

Pros of taking out cash from a life insurance policy

  • It’s simple: Policy loans generally don’t require a loan application or credit check because the cash value in your account serves as collateral on the loan. You can repay your loan on your own schedule, and your payments go back into your policy. 
  • Low interest rates: The interest rate you receive on a cash value loan can vary depending on whether your loan is fixed or variable. Typically, interest rates on life insurance loans range from 5% to 8%, which is far better than credit card interest rates and even slightly better than personal loan rates. Of course, you won’t pay interest if you simply withdraw the money, but that lowers your cash value amount, which can take a long time to rebuild.
  • No impact on credit: Taking out a mortgage or a personal loan could cause a temporary minor drop in your credit score. That’s not the case with a life insurance loan, since your eligibility is primarily based on the amount of your cash value, not your creditworthiness.

Cons of taking out cash from a life insurance policy

  • A lower death benefit: Withdrawing funds reduces the amount of your cash value and your policy’s death benefit. Similarly, any loan amount you don’t pay back is subtracted from the death benefit.
  • Withdrawal or loan may not be an option: You can’t access money from your whole life policy unless there is sufficient cash value in your account, which takes time to build. If you need money shortly after enrolling in your policy, you may not have the accumulated funds to borrow or withdraw. Rules regarding how much money you can borrow will also vary by insurer.
  • Your insurance policy could lapse: When you pay back a policy loan, you must pay interest on the borrowed amount. If you borrow a substantial amount and accrue interest that eclipses your cash balance, your policy could lapse and be closed by your insurer. In that case, your loan balance could be considered taxable income, leaving you accountable for a potentially large tax bill.

Alternatives to cashing out life insurance

If you don’t want to use your life insurance for cash, consider these alternatives. Using one of these options may allow you the money you need without risking your coverage.

  • Personal loan: Depending on your credit, you may qualify for a personal loan with a competitive interest rate.
  • 0% introductory APR credit card: Some credit cards offer the chance to accrue no interest for a given period (typically 12 to 18 months). Just be sure you can pay off the credit card balance before the introductory period expires and you start taking on interest at the regular rate.
  • Home equity loan: Home equity loans allow you to access your home’s equity for cash, but you’ll likely be on the hook for closing costs that range from 2% to 5% of the loan amount. Educate yourself about the potential risks of a home equity loan, including the risk of a foreclosure on your home if you fail to make your payments.
  • Cash-out refinancing: If eligible, you can take out a new mortgage loan larger than the amount you currently owe on your home, then pay the initial loan and take the difference between the two as cash. This may be an alternative way to access a large sum of cash.
  • Reverse mortgages:reverse mortgage permits older homeowners (62 and above) who have completely paid off or paid off most of their mortgage to take out a portion of their home’s equity. This would qualify as tax-free income, and you could wind up getting a substantial sum if you don’t owe much and/or your home’s value has risen since you initially purchased it. 

Whether you decide to get cash out from your life insurance policy or not, take steps to build an emergency fund that covers your living expenses for at least three to six months. A sufficient emergency fund can help cover a financial crisis without having to borrow money from your life insurance policy or elsewhere.



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Helene, Milton losses expected to surpass “truly historic” $50 billion each

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Monstrous hurricanes Helene and Milton caused so much complex havoc that damages are still being added up, but government and private experts say they will likely join the infamous ranks of Katrina, Sandy and Harvey as super costly $50-billion-plus killers.

Making that even more painful is that most of the damage – 95% or more in Helene’s case – was not insured, putting victims in a deeper financial hole.

Storm deaths have been dropping over time, although Helene was an exception. But even adjusted for inflation, damages from intense storms are skyrocketing because people are building in harm’s way, rebuilding costs are rising faster than inflation and human-caused climate change are making storms stronger and wetter, experts in different fields said.

“Today’s storms, today’s events are simply vastly different from yesterday’s events. One of the things that we’re seeing is the energy content that these systems can retain is significantly greater than it used to be,” said John Dickson, president of Aon Edge Insurance Agency, which specializes in flood coverage. “The weather seems to be, in many cases, moving faster than we as a society are able to keep pace with it.”

In the last 45 years, and adjusted for inflation, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has counted 396 weather disasters that caused at least $1 billion in damage. Sixty-three of those were hurricanes or tropical storms.

The $50 billion mark for direct losses is a threshold that differentiates “truly historic events,” said Adam Smith, the economist and meteorologist who runs the list out of NOAA’s National Center for Environmental Information in Helene-hit Asheville, North Carolina.

Only eight hurricanes reached that threshold. Smith said he thought Milton and Helene have “a very good shot” of joining that list.

The first $50 billion hurricane was Andrew in 1992. The U.S. went 13 more years before Katrina topped the damages chart, then seven years until the third costly whopper, Sandy. Helene and Milton would make seven in the last seven years.

Calculating damages is far from an exact science. The more complex and nastier storms are – like Milton and Helene – the longer it takes, Smith said. Damage is spread over different places and often a much larger area, with wind damage in some places and flood damage elsewhere. Helene, in particular, caused widespread flooding and in places not used to it. Estimates for those storms from private firms in recent days vary and are incomplete.

There’s three categories of damage: insured damage, uninsured damage and total economic cost. Many risk and insurance firms only estimate insured losses.

Homeowner insurance usually covers wind damage, but not flood. Special insurance has to be bought for that. Flood insurance coverage rates vary by region and storms differ on whether they cause more wind or water damage. Helene was mostly water damage, which is less likely to be covered, while Milton had a good chunk of wind damage.

Of the top 10 costliest hurricanes as compiled by insurance giant Swiss Re – not including Helene or Milton yet – insured damage is about 44% of total costs.

But with Helene, Aon’s Dickson estimated that only 5% of victims had insurance coverage for the type of damage they got. He estimated $10 billion in insured damage so doing the math would put total damage in the $100 billion to $200 billion range, which he called a bit high but in the ballpark. Insured losses for Milton are in the $50 billion to $60 billion range, he said.

With Helene, Swiss Re said less than 2% of Georgia households have federal flood insurance, with North Carolina and South Carolina at 3% and 9%. In North Carolina’s Buncombe County, where more than 57 people died from Helene’s flooding, less than 1% of the homes are covered by federal flood insurance, the agency said.

Risk modeling by Moody’s, the financial services conglomerate, put a combined two-storm total damage estimate of $20 billion to $34 billion.

Karen Clark and Company, a disaster modeling firm that uses computer simulations superimposed on storm and insurance data, wouldn’t give total damage estimates for the storms. But the company figured insured losses alone were $36 billion for Milton and $6.4 billion for Helene.

“The economic losses are going up because we’re putting more infrastructure and housing in harm’s way,” said University of South Carolina’s Susan Cutter, co-director of the Hazards Vulnerability and Resilience Institute, who added that climate change also plays a role. “Human losses and deaths are going down because people are being a little bit more vigilant about paying attention to preparedness and getting out of harm’s way.”

Much of the damage is because of flooding. Studies show that hurricanes are getting wetter because of the buildup of heat-trapping gases from the burning of coal, oil and gas. Basic physics dictates that clouds hold 4% more moisture for every degree Fahrenheit, and that falls as rain.

“There is scientific agreement that floods and flooding from these hurricanes is becoming more frequent and more severe. So it is likely that we’re going to be seeing a higher frequency of storms like Helene in the future,” said Karen Clark, who founded her namesake firm. “It’s not really an insurance issue because it’s not privately insured. This is really a societal issue and political question. How do we want to deal with this?”

Clark and several of the experts said it’s time for society to think about where it builds, where it lives and if it should just leave dangerous areas and not rebuild, a concept called “managed retreat.”

“At what point do you as an individual continue to build, rebuild, rebuild and rebuild versus saying ‘OK, I’ve had enough’,” Cutter said.

And when it comes to flood insurance, many homeowners in risky areas find it’s too expensive, so they don’t buy it, Clark said. But when a storm hits them, she said “all of us as taxpayers, we’re going to pay it because we know there are going to be federal dollars coming into those areas to help people rebuild. So all taxpayers, we’re actually paying for people to live in risky areas.”



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Sneak peek: Who killed Aileen Seiden in Room 15?

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Independent panel investigating Trump rally shooting warns of “deep flaws” in Secret Service, calls for “fundamental reform”

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Washington — An independent panel tasked with reviewing the July assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, found the Secret Service suffers from “deep flaws” that enabled the attack at the Trump campaign rally, and called for the agency to undergo “fundamental reform” to carry out its mission of protecting top government officials around the world.

Findings from the panel were made public in a report released Thursday. In a letter accompanying the report signed by all four of its members, the independent review panel said it identified in the course of its investigation “numerous mistakes” that led to the attempted assassination against Trump, but also “deeper systemic issues that must be addressed with urgency.”

“The Secret Service as an agency requires fundamental reform to carry out its mission,” the members said. “Without that reform, the Independent Review Panel believes another Butler can and will happen again.”

The panel dedicated its work to Corey Comperatore, who was killed in the shooting, and James Copenhaver and David Dutch, who were injured, as well as their families.

In its review, the members identified six failures related to the attack at the July 13 rally: the absence of personnel to secure the so-called AGR building, whose roof gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks fired from; the failure to address the line-of-sight threat posed by the building; communication issues between the Secret Service and local law enforcement; the failure of the Secret Service or law enforcement to encounter the shooter even though he was spotted more than 90 minutes before opening fire; the failure to inform the leaders of Trump’s detail about the gunman; and the failure to detect a drone the gunman operated hours before the shooting.

The group also pointed to “deeper concerns” it found about the Secret Service, including what it said was a “lack of clarity” over who has security ownership of a protectee’s site, “corrosive cultural attitudes” about resources; and a “troubling lack of critical thinking” by Secret Service employees in the days before and after the assassination attempt.

It faulted Secret Service leadership for what the panel said was a failure to take ownership of security planning and execution at the Butler rally and an “insufficiently experienced-based approach” by Trump’s detail about the selection of agents to perform security-critical tasks. 

The breakdowns “reveal deep flaws in the Secret Service, including some that appear to be systemic or cultural,” the report said.

To mitigate the issues identified by the panel, it called for new Secret Service leadership with experience outside the agency and a refocusing on its “core protective mission.”

“The Secret Service must be the world’s leading governmental protective organization,” the report states. “The events at Butler on July 13 demonstrate that, currently, it is not.”

Numerous shortcomings identified

The report walks through the planning leading up to the rally on July 13, beginning with a kickoff meeting hosted by the Secret Service for state and local law enforcement on July 8, and the events in the run-up to when the gunman fired eight rounds from a semi-automatic rifle before he was killed by a Secret Service countersniper.

Butler assassination attempt Donald Trump
Members of Secret Service assist former President Donald Trump into a vehicle during a campaign rally on July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania following an assassination attempt.

Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images


The site agent assigned by Trump’s detail to coordinate with the Pittsburgh field office to conduct site advance work and security planning for the Butler rally graduated from the Secret Service’s academy in 2020, the panel said, and joined the former president’s detail in 2023. The report also said the site agent engaged in “minimal” site advance work or security planning.

The panel said the failure to secure the AGR building, its roof and others in the area represents a “critical security failure” and noted that there were available personnel to secure it.

In identifying communications issues between the Secret Service and local and state law enforcement, the panel said there were “inconsistent and varying approaches” to the methods of communication, with a “chaotic mixture” of radio, cell phone, text and email used by different personnel at different points.

The panel also noted that in the 90 minutes that elapsed from when the gunman was first spotted by a local countersniper who was going off-duty to when he began shooting, the gunman was never questioned despite being seen with a range finder.

“The particular combination of repetitive suspicious behavior in a close-in location, the possession of a range finder and its use to range the stage, and only intermittent visual contact with him (in other words, Crooks was not being continuously monitored and surveilled) represents information that should have triggered a police or other law enforcement encounter, and such an encounter likely would have averted the subsequent sequence of events,” its report said.

Three Secret Service personnel were made aware that the gunman was on the roof of the AGR building in the two minutes before he opened fire, the report stated, and a fourth agent was told in that same period that he was on the roof. But the panel said the leadership of Trump’s detail was never told about Crooks.

Secret Service’s reaction sharply criticized

The independent review panel lambasted Secret Service personnel for what it said was a lack of self-reflection in the wake of the assassination attempt.

“July 13 represents a historic security failure by the Secret Service which almost led to the death of a former president and current nominee and did lead to the death of a rally attendee,” the report stated. “For personnel involved, given the multi-factor nature of the security failure, even a superficial level of reflection should yield insights regarding lapses and potential remediations. But many personnel struggled to identify meaningful examples of either type of observation — what went wrong and what could be done better in the future to prevent a similar tragedy from reoccurring.”

Panel members said they identified complacency among Secret Service employees they spoke to and said new agency leadership will need to inspire agents to “be elite and flawless.”

Release of the panel’s findings comes as some members of Congress have called for increases in the Secret Service budget. Its acting director, Ronald Rowe, has also warned that the agency has “finite resources” that it is stretching to “their maximum.”

The outside review found that while more resources would be “helpful,” lessons from the assassination attempt will be lost if the conversation surrounding the security failures devolves into a discussion about Secret Service funding.

“The failure of July 13 likely would have occurred regardless of budget levels at the current Secret Service,” the report found. “Put otherwise, even an unlimited budget would not, by itself, remediate many of the causes of the failures on July 13.”

The four-member panel was formed at the direction of President Biden and conducted its examination of the attack from early August through early October. The panel consisted of Mark Filip, former deputy attorney general; David Mitchell, a longtime law enforcement officer; Janet Napolitano, former secretary of Homeland Security; and Frances Townsend, former assistant to President George W. Bush for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism.

During the span of its investigation, members conducted 58 interviews with Secret Service employees and federal, state and local law enforcement. The panel collected and reviewed more than 7,000 documents, it said in its report.

Ramifications continue to unfold

The assassination attempt at Trump’s rally in Butler led to substantial scrutiny of the Secret Service, which faced questions about how the shooter was able to gain access to a roof so close to where the former president was speaking.

A five-page summary of the Secret Service’s report on the attempted assassination released last month blamed the security lapse on multiple communication deficiencies among law enforcement at the rally site and a “lack of due diligence” by the agency.

In addition to the Secret Service and FBI investigations, several congressional committees and a bipartisan task force are probing the attack.

The FBI previously revealed that the gunman flew a drone near the site of the campaign event roughly two hours before he began shooting and was livestreaming footage from it for about 11 minutes. Investigators said they recovered the drone and two explosive devices from the gunman’s car, as well as a third explosive device from his residence. 

The gunman also conducted a Google search for “how far away was Oswald from Kennedy” one week before the shooting, the FBI found, a reference to Lee Harvey Oswald, the assassin who shot and killed President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

The assassination attempt on Trump, and the criticism of the Secret Service that followed, led to the resignation of Kimberly Cheatle, who headed the agency at the time of the attack. Rowe is now serving as the Secret Service’s temporary leader.

Concerns about the agency’s ability to protect Trump grew again last month after a Hawaii man, armed with a semiautomatic rifle, was arrested after he was spotted by a Secret Service agent in the brush along the fence line at Trump’s golf club in West Palm Beach, Florida, where the former president was playing.

The suspect, identified as Ryan Wesley Routh, was charged with three violations of federal firearms laws, assaulting a federal officer and attempted assassination of a presidential candidate. He pleaded not guilty to all five counts.

The two incidents targeting Trump led the Secret Service to boost its protection for the major presidential and vice presidential candidates.



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