By OLPolicy | Licensed Insurance Specialists | (866) 757-5350
When most people buy final expense insurance, they’re thinking about one thing: the death benefit their family will receive. That makes sense – it’s the whole point of the policy.
But here’s something a lot of seniors don’t realize until after they’ve had their policy for a few years: final expense insurance also quietly builds a cash value over time. It’s a living benefit – money that belongs to you while you’re still alive.
This Final Expense Insurance Cash Value guide is here to break down exactly what that cash value means for you. We’ll explain how it grows inside your policy, what you can actually do with it and just as importantly, what its limits are. No confusing financial language. Just the clear, honest answers you deserve.
| 💡 Quick Answer
Cash value is a savings component that builds up inside your final expense (whole life) policy over time. It grows slowly and tax-deferred and you can borrow against it or surrender it for cash if needed. However, it is a secondary benefit – the primary purpose of final expense insurance is the death benefit it provides to your family. |
Final expense insurance is a type of whole life insurance. Unlike term life – which is pure coverage with no savings element – whole life policies come with two distinct components baked into every premium you pay:
Every month when you pay your premium, a portion of that payment goes toward keeping your coverage active and a smaller portion gets set aside into the cash value component. The insurance company then credits that cash value with a small, guaranteed interest rate – typically between 2% and 4% per year depending on the carrier.
Over time – and we’re talking years, not months – this cash value accumulates into a meaningful amount that you can actually access while you’re alive. Think of it as a very slow, very steady savings account that sits alongside your life insurance protection.
| ✅ The Key Difference from Term Life Insurance
Term life insurance has zero cash value. You pay premiums, get coverage and when the term ends – the money is gone. Final expense whole life insurance, by contrast, keeps building cash value for as long as you hold the policy. Your premium money isn’t just ‘spent’ – part of it is yours to keep. |
The growth of cash value inside a final expense policy is slow and steady – not dramatic. This isn’t an investment vehicle. You’re not going to double your money. But you are going to accumulate a real, accessible asset over time.
Here’s how the growth process works:
The most honest thing we can tell you: don’t buy a final expense policy because of the cash value. Buy it for the death benefit. The cash value is a bonus – a useful one, but a bonus.
To make this concrete, here’s an illustration of how cash value might grow inside a $10,000 final expense policy for a 65-year-old paying approximately $40/month ($480/year). These figures are estimates based on typical whole life policy structures – your actual policy values will be in your policy illustration.
| Policy Year | Premiums Paid | Est. Cash Value | Death Benefit | Cash Value % | What You Can Do |
| Year 1 | $480 | ~$0–$50 | $10,000 | < 1% | Coverage only – building begins |
| Year 3 | $1,440 | ~$150–$300 | $10,000 | 1–3% | Small loan possible |
| Year 5 | $2,400 | ~$400–$700 | $10,000 | 4–7% | Small loan or partial surrender |
| Year 10 | $4,800 | ~$1,200–$2,000 | $10,000 | 12–20% | Meaningful loan available |
| Year 15 | $7,200 | ~$2,500–$3,800 | $10,000 | 25–38% | Loan or paid-up option |
| Year 20 | $9,600 | ~$4,000–$6,000 | $10,000 | 40–60% | Significant value accumulated |
| Age 100+ | Varies | = Death Benefit | $10,000 | 100% | Policy matures – full benefit paid |
| ⚠️ Important Caveat on These Numbers
These are representative estimates only. Your actual cash value growth depends on your specific carrier, policy type, premium amount and the interest rate credited by your insurer. Ask OLPolicy for a policy illustration – a personalized document that shows your exact projected cash values year by year – before you buy. |
This is where it gets practical. Once your policy has accumulated enough cash value – usually after the first few years – you have real options. Here are the four things you can do with the cash value in your final expense policy.
The most popular way to access your cash value is through a policy loan. This works exactly like it sounds – you borrow money from the insurer using your cash value as collateral. A few important things to know:
| 💡 Policy Loan Example
Imagine your policy has $2,000 in cash value. You take out a $1,500 loan for a home repair. You don’t repay it. When you pass away, your $10,000 death benefit is paid to your beneficiary minus $1,500 (plus any accrued interest). Your family still gets the majority of the benefit – and you got the money you needed when you needed it. |
If you decide you no longer need the life insurance coverage, you can cancel the policy and receive the current cash surrender value – the accumulated cash value minus any applicable surrender charges.
This is a permanent decision. Once you surrender the policy, your coverage ends and cannot be reinstated. For most seniors, surrendering a final expense policy is not recommended – the death benefit protection is usually still valuable. But it is an option if your financial circumstances change dramatically.
Some policies allow you to use your accumulated cash value to stop paying premiums while keeping a reduced version of your coverage active. This is called a reduced paid-up option. You stop making payments and in exchange, your death benefit is reduced to whatever the cash value can support.
This is useful for seniors on extremely tight fixed incomes who need to free up monthly cash flow without losing all coverage. Not all carriers offer this feature – check your policy documents or ask an OLPolicy specialist.
The simplest option is to do nothing with the cash value and simply let it grow. Over time, it becomes a quiet financial safety net – there if you ever need it, growing in the background and ultimately adding stability to your overall financial picture.
For seniors who don’t need to access the money but want the peace of mind of knowing it’s there, this is often the most sensible approach.
If you’re considering accessing your cash value, understanding the difference between a policy loan and surrendering the policy entirely is critical. Here’s a clear comparison:
| Factor | Policy Loan | Cash Surrender |
| What it means | You borrow against your cash value | You cancel the policy and receive the cash value |
| Coverage status | Policy stays active while loan is outstanding | Policy is permanently cancelled |
| Tax consequences | No income tax on loan proceeds | May be taxable if cash value exceeds premiums paid |
| Death benefit impact | Benefit reduced by outstanding loan + interest | No death benefit – policy is gone |
| Can you reverse it? | Yes – repay the loan anytime | No – once surrendered, coverage ends permanently |
| Best used for | Emergency funds while keeping coverage | When you no longer need the insurance at all |
| ✅ Our Recommendation
In almost every situation, a policy loan is better than surrendering the policy. You access the cash you need AND keep your family’s death benefit protection. Only surrender the policy if you’re absolutely certain your family no longer needs the coverage. |
Tax treatment is one of the most misunderstood aspects of cash value – and getting it wrong can cost you. Here’s the straightforward version:
Your cash value grows completely tax-deferred. You owe no income tax on the interest credited to your cash value each year. This is one of the genuine financial advantages of whole life insurance over taxable savings accounts.
Policy loans are not considered taxable income – the IRS treats them as a loan, not a distribution. As long as your policy stays in force, you pay no taxes on the money you borrow.
If you cancel the policy and receive the cash surrender value, you may owe income tax – but only on the amount that exceeds your total premium payments. For example, if you paid $5,000 in premiums over the years and receive $6,500 in cash surrender value, you’d owe tax only on the $1,500 gain.
The death benefit paid to your beneficiary is almost always income-tax free, regardless of whether the policy had accumulated cash value. This is consistent across all life insurance policies.
| ⚠️ Always Consult a Tax Professional
Tax rules around life insurance can be complex and your personal situation matters. The guidance above is general – consult a tax advisor or CPA before making decisions about surrendering a policy or taking large loans, especially in higher-income years. |
A common question we hear is: “Should I buy final expense insurance for the cash value or just put money in a savings account?”
Honest answer: if your only goal is maximizing savings growth, a savings account, CD or money market account will likely outperform your policy’s cash value in pure return terms. But that comparison misses the point entirely.
| Factor | Final Expense Cash Value | Regular Savings Account |
| Primary purpose | Life insurance death benefit | Pure savings/growth |
| Cash value growth rate | ~2–4% guaranteed, tax-deferred | Varies – currently 4–5% in high-yield accounts |
| Tax on growth | Tax-deferred (no annual tax) | Taxable each year |
| Access to funds | Loan or surrender (with implications) | Withdraw anytime, no consequences |
| Death benefit for family | Yes – the main feature | No – just the account balance |
| Premium flexibility | Fixed monthly payment | Deposit whatever, whenever |
| What happens if you stop | Coverage may lapse | Nothing – it’s your money |
The right way to think about final expense cash value is this: it’s a bonus feature of a product you’re buying primarily for the death benefit. You’re not buying it as an investment. You’re buying it to protect your family and the cash value is a useful, tax-advantaged perk that builds alongside that protection.
| Questions About Your Final Expense Cash Value?
Our licensed specialists at OLPolicy will explain exactly how your policy’s cash value works – and help you find the best coverage for your needs. 📞 Call OLPolicy: (866) 757-5350 |
| ❌ MYTH: The cash value is paid out in addition to the death benefit when you die.
✅ TRUTH: In a standard final expense policy, the insurance company pays only the death benefit when you pass away – the cash value is absorbed by the insurer. If you want both paid out, you’d need a specific ‘return of cash value’ rider, which most standard final expense policies don’t include. |
| ❌ MYTH: You can withdraw the cash value like a bank account anytime.
✅ TRUTH: Cash value isn’t a checking account. You access it through a loan (which keeps coverage active) or by surrendering the policy entirely. Withdrawing without surrendering requires a loan and outstanding loans reduce your death benefit. |
| ❌ MYTH: The cash value grows fast enough to be used as a retirement savings tool.
✅ TRUTH: Final expense policies are not wealth-building products. The cash value grows slowly at guaranteed rates – it’s a safety net, not a retirement strategy. For serious savings growth, other financial vehicles are more appropriate. |
| ❌ MYTH: If I stop paying premiums, I’ll lose all my cash value.
✅ TRUTH: Not necessarily. Many policies have a non-forfeiture provision – meaning if you stop paying, the accumulated cash value can be used to either extend coverage for a period or convert to a reduced paid-up policy. Check your policy documents for the specific terms. |
Ruth bought a $15,000 final expense policy at age 63 and had been paying her $62/month premium faithfully for 11 years. When her water heater failed in the middle of winter, she needed $1,800 for an emergency replacement. She called her insurer, took out a $1,800 policy loan in two days and had the repair done by the weekend.
She repaid the loan over the next six months. Her coverage never lapsed, her family’s death benefit was never permanently reduced and she didn’t touch a single dollar of her savings. The cash value did exactly what it was meant to do.
George had held a $10,000 policy for 15 years and his health had declined significantly. His family was financially secure and he felt his adult children no longer needed the death benefit. He chose to surrender the policy for its $3,600 cash surrender value – which he gave directly to his granddaughter to help with her college tuition.
It was the right choice for his situation. His children were supportive, his estate was in good shape and putting that money to work for family while he was alive meant more to him than the death benefit.
Louise had accumulated $2,200 in cash value over 9 years. She didn’t need the money – she just liked knowing it was there. When her insurer sent her annual statement showing her growing cash value, she felt a quiet satisfaction knowing that her policy was building something tangible, not just disappearing month by month.
She’s never touched it. She doesn’t plan to. But the knowledge that she could access it in an emergency gives her genuine peace of mind.
Yes – all final expense policies are whole life insurance and all whole life policies accumulate cash value. The growth rate and timeline vary by carrier, but the cash value feature is universal.
Most policies begin allowing loans after the first 1–3 years, once a minimum cash value has accumulated. Check your policy’s loan provisions or call OLPolicy at (866) 757-5350 to find out when your policy allows access.
Yes – any outstanding loan balance plus accrued interest is deducted from the death benefit when it’s paid. Repaying the loan restores the full death benefit for your beneficiary.
Most final expense whole life policies credit cash value at a guaranteed rate of 2–4% annually, depending on the carrier. This rate is guaranteed and will never drop below the stated minimum.
Not through market fluctuations – final expense cash value is not invested in the stock market and carries no investment risk. You could lose access to it by letting the policy lapse, so keeping up with premiums is important.
No – policy loans are not considered taxable income as long as the policy remains in force. If the policy lapses with an outstanding loan, the loan amount may then be treated as taxable income.
In a standard policy, the cash value is absorbed by the insurer and your beneficiary receives only the stated death benefit. The benefit amount already accounts for the cash value – it’s not paid separately on top of it.
Yes, many carriers allow you to use accumulated cash value to pay premiums – either temporarily or permanently through a reduced paid-up option. Ask your insurer or call OLPolicy to confirm if your policy allows this.
Cash value is a quiet, steady benefit that makes final expense insurance more than just a death benefit – it’s a living financial resource that grows alongside your protection.
It won’t make you rich. It won’t replace a retirement account. But for a senior on a fixed income who needs emergency access to funds without touching savings or taking on debt, a policy loan against your cash value can be a genuine lifesaver.
And for those who never need to touch it, it simply accumulates in the background, adding a layer of financial security you paid for without even realizing it.
If you want to know exactly how much cash value your current policy has built – or if you’re shopping for a new policy and want to see a side-by-side illustration of cash value projections – OLPolicy is here to help.
| Questions About Your Final Expense Cash Value?
Our licensed specialists at OLPolicy will explain exactly how your policy’s cash value works – and help you find the best coverage for your needs. 📞 Call OLPolicy: (866) 757-5350 |
OLPolicy | Licensed Insurance Agency | (866) 757-5350 | www.olpolicy.com
This article is for educational purposes only. Cash value projections are estimates and vary by carrier, policy and premium amount. Tax treatment depends on individual circumstances – consult a licensed tax professional for personalized advice.