Episode Details
Back to EpisodesUsing IUL for Retirement: Smart Strategy or Costly Mistake?
Published 1 week ago
Description
You've probably seen the pitch. Maybe you sat across from an advisor, or watched a video, or had a friend forward you something.
The illustration was impressive: tax-free income in retirement, market upside without the downside, a number at the end that made your eyes widen a little. An Indexed Universal Life policy, they said, could be the retirement vehicle you've been missing.
https://www.youtube.com/live/c9mJzNr029w?si=u2Tt1t2K2eyqKkRc
Parts of it sound great. Who wouldn't want growth linked to the S&P 500 with a floor that stops your cash value from going negative? Who wouldn't want retirement income that doesn't show up on a tax return?
But what if the real risk isn't what the illustration shows? What if it's what the illustration doesn't show?
That's the question this article is here to answer. Not to label IUL as good or bad. Not to tell you it's a scam. But to walk through what an IUL is actually designed to do, where its structural assumptions start to break down, and why so many people discover the problems far too late, often right as they're approaching retirement.
By the end, you'll understand the specific retirement risks that rarely come up in the sales conversation, when IUL might genuinely make sense, and what a stronger alternative looks like as part of a broader retirement plan.
Key TakeawaysWhat Is an IUL, and How Does It Actually Work?The Index Crediting StructurePoint-to-Point CreditingThe Flexible PremiumThe Retirement Risk No One Warns You AboutThe Cost That Keeps ClimbingWhy the Illustration Is Not the ContractWhen "Flexibility" Becomes a LiabilityWhat Happens When the Policy Can't Sustain ItselfThe Added Risk of Premium FinancingTo Be Fair: When IUL Might Be AppropriateThe Right Buyer for IULThe Non-Negotiable ConditionWhat Actually Works: Whole Life as Part of a Retirement PlanThe Volatility BufferTax-Neutral AccessThe Death Benefit as Permission to SpendHow to Use ItThe Questions Worth Asking Before You CommitWhat a Plan Built on Certainty Looks LikeBook a Strategy CallFAQsIs IUL good for retirement income?What is the biggest risk of using IUL in retirement?Can IUL replace a 401(k) or IRA for retirement?What is the difference between IUL and whole life for retirement planning?What happens if my IUL policy lapses in retirement?
Key Takeaways
IUL is built on a one-year renewable term chassis, meaning mortality costs are contractually guaranteed to rise each year, peaking exactly when you need the policy to perform most reliably.
The zero floor on crediting does not mean your cash value can't decline. Fees, mortality costs, and loan interest still come out regardless of how the index performs.
The "flexibility" of IUL premiums is often a behavioral trap. Missed payments don't announce themselves. Policies deteriorate quietly.
Using policy loans for retirement income adds a third layer of cost on top of already-rising mortality charges and fees, compounding the risk of lapse.
If a policy lapses with outstanding loans and cash value above your cost basis, a taxable event is triggered. In retirement, that's one of the worst times to absorb an unexpected tax bill.
IUL has a legitimate, narrow use case. For most people, whole life serves as the certainty layer within a diversified retirement system.
What Is an IUL, and How Does It Actually Work?
An Indexed Universal Life policy is a form of permanent life insurance with three components: a death benefit, a cash value account, and a premium. On the surface, that's similar to whole life. The distinction is in how the cash value grows, and what's guaranteed.
The Index Crediting Structure
With an IUL, your cash value is credited based on the performance of a market index, most commonly the S&P 500. Two limits govern that crediting. A floor (usually 0%) means that if the index goes negative, your credited amount doesn't go below zero. A cap limits how much you receive in a strong year, typically anywhere from 6% to 15%, depending on the contract.
The important