Participating life insurance, also called dividend-paying life insurance, helps give policyholders a chance to benefit when the insurer has a solid financial performance. On top of this, it offers lifelong life insurance coverage and a cash value growth component that grows tax-deferred to help increase wealth. Below, we’ll explore participating life insurance in more detail and explore some ways to get the most out of these policies.
Table of Contents
Participating life insurance is a permanent life insurance policy type, usually whole life insurance, that may pay dividends to the policyholder if the insurer performs well financially.1 For example, insurers may have paid fewer death benefits than expected, found ways to cut costs, or outperformed investment expectations. The company’s board of directors evaluates its needs and, if it decides it doesn’t need the extra funds, pays a dividend to participating life insurance policyholders. As a result, these policies help offer another layer of potential financial benefits that traditional permanent life insurance policies lack.
Participating life insurance policies are often whole life insurance policies. These come with higher premiums than term life insurance to account for the lifelong coverage and cash value growth component. Whole life insurance also costs more than other permanent policy types, like universal life insurance. For reference, here are some average costs for a $250,000 non-participating whole life insurance policy for healthy men and women:2
Age and Gender | Monthly Premium |
---|---|
Male age 30 | $211 |
Female age 30 | $185 |
Male age 40 | $303 |
Female age 40 | $275 |
Male age 50 | $435 |
Female age 50 | $403 |
Participating life insurance policies will cost more than this, on average, due to the potential for dividends. However, this can reverse over time as your cash value and dividends grow, which can help to cover some of your premiums.
Here are some key differences between participating and non-participating life insurance policies:3
Don’t wait until it’s too late. Help cover yourself and your family with coverage from Aflac.
Get StartedYou can use your participating life insurance policy dividends in several ways:
You can have the insurer send you cash payments as a check or ACH. This offers the most flexibility since you can use your dividends for anything you want, such as investing extra for retirement or making a discretionary purchase.
Paid-up life insurance is extra coverage you can purchase with life insurance dividends. It helps you to increase your death benefit without raising premiums. A larger policy entitles you to a larger dividend in the future, meaning paid-up insurance can help you compound dividends and earn more.4
Paid-up insurance boosts your cash value contributions as well, helping to lead to more potential cash-deferred growth over time. This option can work well if you want to accelerate your cash value and grow coverage to keep up with inflation or rising lifestyle expenses.
You can ask your insurer to put dividends toward premium payments. This helps you reduce or fully cover your premiums without losing coverage. This may be a good choice if you want to maintain the same level of coverage while reducing your life insurance expenses.
Insurers let you save dividends in an insurer-maintained interest-bearing savings account. You can earn more on your dividends without managing them yourself. Additionally, you can withdraw from this account as needed. Interest earnings may be taxable.
If you borrow from your cash value, you can ask the insurer to pay dividends toward the policy loan. This can help you reduce your loan balance and avoid policy lapse without paying as much out of pocket.
Here are some circumstances where participating life insurance could work for you:
If participating life insurance doesn’t fit your needs, consider these alternatives:
Participating life insurance helps offer a financial component that lets you earn potential dividends when the company performs well. This may help you to bolster your insurance, pay premiums, or accelerate your cash value growth. However, premiums may be higher initially, and insurers don’t pay a dividend unless they have extra funds to do so.
If you have any other questions about a dividend-paying policy life insurance or want to explore your life insurance coverage options, Aflac can help. Chat with an agent today to get a quote.
Get StartedConsidering family life insurance? Learn how life insurance for families can financially protect loved ones in case you pass away and get a quote from Aflac.
A million dollar life insurance policy can give your family added financial security if you pass away. Learn how much $1 million life insurance costs.
1 NerdWallet - What Is a Mutual Life Insurance Company? Published December 7, 2023. https://www.nerdwallet.com/article/insurance/participating-life-insurance-policy. Accessed June 4, 2025.
2 Forbes - Universal Life Insurance Vs. Whole Life Insurance. Updated April 25, 2025. https://www.forbes.com/advisor/life-insurance/whole-life-vs-universal-life-insurance/. Accessed June 4, 2025.
3 Investopedia - What Is a Participating Policy? Definition and How It Works. Updated September 3, 2023. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/participation_policy.asp. Accessed June 4, 2025.
4 Insurance and Estate Strategies LLC - Paid-Up Life Insurance: Complete Guide to No-Premium Coverage (2025). Updated December 5, 2022. https://www.insuranceandestates.com/paid-up-life-insurance/. Accessed June 4, 2025.
Content within this article is provided for general informational purposes and is not provided as tax, legal, health, or financial advice for any person or for any specific situation. Employers, employees, and other individuals should contact their own advisers about their situations. For complete details, including availability and costs of Aflac insurance, please contact your local Aflac agent.
Coverage is underwritten by American Family Life Assurance Company of Columbus. In New York, coverage is underwritten by American Family Life Assurance Company of New York.
68000 series: In Arkansas, Idaho, Oklahoma & Virginia, ICC1368100, ICC1368200, ICC1368300, ICC1368400. In Delaware, Policies A68100-A68400. B1000: In Arkansas, Idaho, Oklahoma & Virginia, Policies: ICC18B61JWO & ICC18B61JTO. In Delaware, Policies B61JWO, B61JTO. B60000: In Arkansas, Oklahoma, & Virginia, Policies: ICC18B60C10, ICC18B60100, ICC18B60200, ICC18B60300, & ICC18B60400. Q60000: Whole: In Arkansas, Delaware Policy Q60100M. In Idaho Policy Q60100MID. In Oklahoma, Policy Q60100MOK. Term: In Delaware, Policies Q60200M. In Arkansas, Idaho & Oklahoma Policies ICC18Q60200M.
Aflac Final Expense insurance coverage is underwritten by Tier One Insurance Company, a subsidiary of Aflac Incorporated and is administered by Aetna Life Insurance Company. Tier One Insurance Company is part of the Aflac family of insurers. In California, Tier One Insurance Company does business as Tier One Life Insurance Company (Tier One NAIC 92908). Not available in New York.
In Arkansas, Delaware, Idaho, Oklahoma & Virginia, Policies ICC21-AFLLBL21 and ICC21-AFLRPL21; and Riders ICC21-AFLABR22, ICC21-AFLADB22, and ICC21-AFLCDR22.
Content within this article is provided for general informational purposes and is not provided as tax, legal, health, or financial advice for any person or for any specific situation. Employers, employees, and other individuals should contact their own advisers about their situations. For complete details, including availability and costs of Aflac insurance, please contact your local Aflac agent.
Coverage may not be available in all states, including but not limited to DE, ID, NJ, NM, NY, VA or VT. Benefits/premium rates may vary based on state and plan levels. Optional riders may be available at an additional cost. Policies and riders may also contain a waiting period. Refer to the exact policy and rider forms for benefit details, definitions, limitations and exclusions.
Receipt of accelerated death benefits may affect eligibility for public assistance programs. Benefits may also be taxable and are not expected to receive the same favorable tax treatment as other types of accelerated death benefits that may be available.
Aflac | Tier One | WWHQ | 1932 Wynnton Road | Columbus, GA 31999
Aflac New York | 22 Corporate Woods Boulevard, Suite 2 | Albany, NY 12211
Z2400454R1
EXP 6/26