What Is a Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance?

collateral assignment of life insurance

Collateral assignment enables you to use your life insurance as collateral for a loan. This allows you to be approved for a loan if you don’t want to put your other assets at risk. Here is how collateral assignment loans work, as well as the pros and cons and alternatives to collateral assignment. For more help with loans or life insurance, consider working with a financial advisor.

What Is a Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance?

When you apply for a loan, such as a business loan, the lender might require collateral before approving the loan. One way to provide collateral for the loan is to use your life insurance policy. If you die before fully repaying the loan, the policy’s death benefit will reimburse your lender first. Then, any remaining funds will go to your beneficiaries.

Not all lenders will allow you to use your life insurance as collateral, and if they do, they may require you to buy a new policy that can be used for collateral. The lender will be listed as an assignee on the collateral assignment form, which is different from indicating the lender as a beneficiary on the policy.

Lenders are often willing to accept this kind of arrangement because money is guaranteed if the borrower defaults or dies before the loan is repaid. To use your life insurance as collateral, you will have to apply for collateral on your new or existing policy.

How to Apply for Collateral Assignment

collateral assignment of life insurance

If your loan requires collateral, there are a few basic steps you must complete to use your life insurance as collateral. We’ll outline those steps here. Firstly, check to see if your existing policy allows collateral assignment and if the policy’s death benefit is sufficient to cover the collateral requirements of the loan. If your existing policy comes up short, you may need a new life insurance policy; if so, make sure the new policy passes both checks.

Once you have your policy you can use for collateral, you must fill out a collateral assignment form. There, you will indicate your lender as the assignee for the death benefit. Both you and your lender will have to assign the form to provide your approval. At this point, your bank should be able to confirm the collateral assignment and you can apply for your new loan.

Collateral Assignment Benefits

If your credit isn’t the best, your lender might ask for collateral. Using your life insurance policy as collateral might be worth considering. Here are some possible reasons:

Collateral Benefit Downsides

There are, as with any financial choice, potential downsides as well:

Possible Alternatives

collateral assignment of life insurance

There are alternatives to a collateral assignment of life insurance that you may want to consider. In addition to the downsides of this arrangement, you may want to reserve your life insurance for other purposes, such as debt repayment.

The Bottom Line

Collateral assignment of life insurance allows you to use your life insurance policy as collateral when applying for loans. This is especially common when applying for business loans. However, your insurer must allow this arrangement, and the policy must be sufficient to cover the collateral requirements. Using your life insurance policy comes with certain benefits, such as not risking your personal assets. But it also has downsides, such as requiring a new policy in some cases. Consult a financial advisor before making any major financial decisions.

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