Life Insurance for Foreign Nationals & Non-U.S. Residents (2026 Guide)

February 6, 2024
Written by: Steven Gibbs | Last Updated on: February 19, 2026
Fact Checked by Jason Herring and Barry Brooksby (licensed insurance experts)

Insurance and Estates, a strategic life insurance provider composed of life insurance professionals, is committed to integrity in our editorial standards and transparency in how we receive compensation from our insurance partners.

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Welcome to Insurance and Estates. We specialize in life insurance for foreign nationals and non-U.S. residents. This comprehensive guide covers eligibility requirements, recent industry changes, and strategies for securing coverage regardless of your immigration status.

In today’s increasingly globalized world, the demand for U.S.-based life insurance among foreign nationals has surged, especially following the COVID-19 pandemic. In response, many carriers have expanded their offerings and streamlined application processes to better serve this growing market.

Key Market Update (2026): Since 2023, several major carriers including John Hancock, Lincoln Financial, Pacific Life, Prudential, and Symetra have relaxed their underwriting guidelines for foreign nationals, particularly regarding nexus requirements (U.S. ties) and power of attorney for policy delivery.

On your search for the right company to meet your needs, it’s important to understand that there is no “best” foreign national life insurance company. Rather, the best life insurance company for you will be the one that offers the right policy, designed for your specific need and purpose.

If you are in the market for life insurance as a non-resident alien, foreign national, or non-U.S. resident, we can help put the pieces together to create a holistic plan that provides you with the ability to create wealth, protect your existing wealth and leave a legacy.

TL;DR — What You Need to Know

  • Who qualifies: Foreign nationals, non-U.S. residents, green card holders, and certain visa holders (H-1B, E-2, L-1, O-1, and others) can obtain U.S.-based life insurance — eligibility depends on your immigration status, country of origin, and U.S. ties.
  • What you need: A valid ID (passport, visa, green card), SSN or ITIN, a U.S. bank account, proof of U.S. ties (property, business, family), and you must complete the application process on U.S. soil.
  • Estate tax disparity: U.S. citizens enjoy a $15 million estate tax exemption (2026). Non-resident foreign nationals get only $60,000 — and that number is not indexed to inflation. Life insurance is one of the most strategic tools to bridge this gap.
  • Policy options: Term, whole life, universal life, and indexed universal life are all available depending on your status and goals. The right product depends on whether you need income replacement, estate tax coverage, wealth transfer, or asset protection.
  • Carriers vary widely: Each insurance company has different rules for foreign nationals — different visa requirements, country classifications, coverage limits, and underwriting processes. No single carrier is best for everyone.

Bottom Line: Your country of origin, immigration status, U.S. ties, and financial goals determine everything — which carriers will compete for your business, which policy structure makes sense, and how to protect your wealth long-term. There is no one-size-fits-all answer, which is exactly why working with an independent team that partners with every major carrier’s specialized foreign national underwriting desk matters more here than in almost any other area of life insurance.

Why Trust This Guide

Insurance and Estates has over 18 years of experience placing life insurance for foreign nationals across dozens of countries and every major visa category. Our team includes a licensed estate planning attorney and independent insurance professionals with access to 40+ carriers — we are not captive to any single company’s program. We work directly with each carrier’s specialized foreign national underwriting team to match your specific situation to the right company, the right product, and the right policy structure. The cases we have placed for foreign nationals range from straightforward green card applications to complex multi-million dollar estate planning strategies for high-net-worth non-residents.

Table of Contents

Eligibility Requirements for Foreign National Life Insurance

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There are four immigration statuses in the U.S.: citizens, residents, non-immigrants, and undocumented immigrants. Life insurance companies will consider you a non-U.S. resident if you reside or travel outside the U.S. over three months a year for “B” countries and over six months a year for “A” countries.

There are two main requirements involved in securing U.S. based life insurance as a non-resident alien, foreign national, or non-U.S. resident. The two categories are “connection” and “valid need.”

Connection to U.S.

As a foreign national who does not reside in the U.S., you must establish a connection to the U.S. Some connections to the U.S. that are generally accepted would be:

  • Real estate ownership
  • U.S. based business ownership
  • U.S. estate tax liability
  • U.S. citizen or permanent resident (e.g., green card holders)
  • 20% of assets are in the U.S.
  • Married to a U.S. citizen
  • Family in the U.S.
  • Good prospects for remaining in the U.S. indefinitely
  • Written commitment with your U.S. based employer
  • Student at a University or College

Valid Need

Further, you must have a valid need for U.S. based life insurance policy. The following qualify for valid needs:

  • Wealth Preservation
  • Funding Estate Taxes
  • Business Succession Planning
  • Income Protection
Estate Tax Planning (2026 Update): Foreign nationals face a significant estate tax disparity. U.S. citizens and domiciled residents now enjoy a $15 million federal estate tax exemption per person ($30 million for married couples), made permanent under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act with no sunset provision. Non-resident foreign nationals, however, are limited to only a $60,000 exemption — a figure that is not indexed to inflation and has remained unchanged for decades. At a 40% tax rate, a non-resident with just $1 million in U.S. assets could face approximately $376,000 in federal estate taxes. Life insurance has become one of the most strategic tools to address this gap, as the death benefit is generally exempt from federal estate tax for non-residents. Additionally, gifts to a non-citizen spouse are limited to $194,000 annually (2026), compared to the unlimited marital deduction available between U.S. citizen spouses.

Additional Requirements for Non-U.S. Residents & Foreign Nationals

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Must Be In U.S.

All activity relating to obtaining a life insurance policy must take place in the U.S. This includes the solicitation all the way up to policy delivery. The agent must deliver the policy to the policy owner in the U.S. issued state. Ideally, you will want to be in the U.S. for up to 90 days as underwriting may take anywhere from 1 week up to 12 weeks, or more depending on your unique situation.

Post-COVID Update: Following the pandemic, several carriers have implemented more digital and remote application options, streamlining the process for international applicants. This includes more flexibility with power of attorney for policy delivery, according to recent industry reports.

Necessary ID Required

A social security number is not necessary but some identification will be required, such as:

  • A copy of your visa and your passport number, expiration date and country of issuance.
  • Permanent resident ID card. For permanent residents, that will include green card holders or white card holders.
  • Individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN) and a valid U.S. residential address.

If you are in the U.S. annually for at least nine months and you have a minimum of one year of U.S. residency prior to your request for a life insurance policy, you will be considered if you hold one of the required temporary visa types.

Required Temporary Visa Types*

E1, E2, H1B, H1C, H4, K1, K3, L1, L2, O1, O3, P, TN, V1.

*All other visa types will be considered on a case by case basis.

2026 Visa Update: Carriers have clarified eligibility by visa category, with particular preference for E2, EB5, H1B, and L1 visa holders. More specificity with visa requirements is now standard industry practice, as detailed by Nationwide.

U.S. Financial Institution

Premiums must be paid through wire transfer, automatic debit or by check from a U.S. financial institution from your own account.

Financial Records

Life insurance companies do background checks and you will need to go through financial underwriting, where the insurance company will look into you financial records to verify that your finances are what you say they are.

The financial requirements for a life insurance policy consist of:

  • A financial questionnaire
  • for $5,000,000 or more: Third party financial statement / proof of ownership
  • for $10,000,000 or more: an Inspection Report is required

Occupation

The carrier will want to know what your occupation is.

  • You may not be eligible if you are involved in foreign military, police, government or judicial services.
  • Other occupations that tend to make it difficult to qualify for U.S. based life insurance for a non U.S. resident or foreign national would be big game hunters, missionaries and journalists.
  • A foreign national life insurance policy is also available for students, such as those in the U.S. temporarily studying at University.

Insurable Interest

Coverage amount varies and you must have an insurable interest. An insurable interest means the beneficiary has a financial interest in the continued life of the insured and that the beneficiary would sustain a financial loss if the insured die prematurely. The bigger companies will insure you up to $40,000,000, i.e. $40 million if you are a resident of an “A” country with the accompanying insurable interest.

Ages

Age limits vary from carrier to carrier. Generally, you will need to be between the ages of 18 – 75 to be eligible for class A and B countries and age 70 max for class C and D countries.

Health Rating

Life insurance companies will assign a specific health rating to your policy. You must be able to qualify for at least a Table D rating or better. In order to qualify for life insurance, you must go through life insurance underwriting, which may require a medical exam. We have a detailed article on taking the life insurance medical exam to help you get the best results possible.

The medical requirements for a life insurance policy consist of:

  • Paramedical exam
  • Urine specimen
  • Blood profile
  • Possible Resting EKG / Treadmill EKG (Based on age and amount)
No-Exam Options (2026): While traditional underwriting remains common, some carriers now offer simplified issue or no-exam policies for non-residents, particularly for smaller coverage amounts. These options feature streamlined underwriting but typically come with higher premiums.

Premium Financing Update

Previously, foreign nationals were not allowed to use premium financing. However, as of 2026, select carriers now consider premium financing arrangements for high-net-worth foreign nationals. This represents a significant shift in the market and opens new possibilities for large policy acquisitions.

If you need premium financing life insurance, please call or email us for more information about these new opportunities and specific eligibility requirements.

5 Years

It is easier to get life insurance if you are in the U.S. on a visa and you plan on remaining in the U.S. for at least 5 years.

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Foreign Travel/National Questionnaire

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You must fill out the Foreign Travel/National Questionnaire also known as a Foreign Resident Inquiry Form. Different countries are classified according to a rating scale (A, B, C, D, and U). Certain countries and its citizens will not be eligible for different reasons, such as country risk or due to specific rules of that country regarding buying life insurance from a foreign nation.

Owner

As a foreign resident, the policy must be owned by you, the insured, or a U.S. based entity that has the requisite insurable interest. A third-party foreign entity or a foreign resident may not own your policy.

Life Insurance by Immigration Status

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Your immigration status is the single biggest factor determining which carriers will consider your application, what policy types are available, and how the underwriting process will unfold. Below we break down the landscape by status so you can understand where you stand before we get into carrier-specific details.

Green Card Holders (Permanent Residents)

Green card holders have the widest range of life insurance options available — in most cases, you will be treated essentially the same as a U.S. citizen. Most carriers require that you have held your green card and resided in the U.S. for at least one to two consecutive years before applying, though some carriers will consider applications sooner.

If you hold a conditional green card (two-year card, typically issued to spouses married to a U.S. citizen for less than two years), most carriers follow the same underwriting rules as for permanent green cards. However, you should be aware that some carriers may apply additional scrutiny or require documentation showing your intent to remain in the U.S.

Once you meet the residency threshold, you are eligible for term, whole life, universal life, and IUL policies with the same rate classes available to U.S. citizens. Your age, health, lifestyle, and financial profile — not your citizenship — will determine your premium.

What to expect: Full access to all policy types and rate classes. Standard underwriting process. Coverage limits up to $40M+ with qualifying carriers. No country classification restrictions once permanent residency is established.

H-1B Visa Holders

The H-1B is one of the most common visas we see in foreign national life insurance cases — and one of the most misunderstood. Despite what many applicants assume, the H-1B is classified as a non-immigrant visa, meaning it signals a temporary intent to stay in the United States. This distinction matters to insurance carriers because it introduces uncertainty about how long you will remain in the country.

That said, many carriers do accept H-1B visa holders. Typical requirements include:

  • Minimum of 12 months of continuous U.S. residency prior to application
  • A valid SSN or ITIN
  • A U.S. bank account
  • Employment documentation and proof of U.S. ties
  • Your country of origin must be on the carrier’s approved list

Coverage limits for H-1B holders vary by carrier and country classification. Some carriers restrict H-1B applicants from high-risk countries to permanent insurance only (no term). Others may cap coverage amounts lower than what a green card holder or citizen would qualify for.

One important nuance: if you know you will be leaving the U.S. within the next two years, you are generally required to disclose that on your application. Policy design matters here — if there is any chance you will relocate, the way the policy is structured from day one will determine whether that move creates complications or not.

Watch out: Not all carriers treat H-1B the same. Some require 1 year of U.S. residency, others require up to 5 years. Your country of origin can change everything — an H-1B holder from a Class A country will have significantly more options than one from a Class C country. This is where carrier matching matters most.

E-1, E-2, L-1, O-1 & Other Work Visas

Certain visa categories signal stronger U.S. ties and longer anticipated stays, which makes carriers more comfortable underwriting your application. These include:

  • E-1 / E-2 — Treaty trader and investor visas. Among the most favorably viewed by carriers because they demonstrate significant financial commitment to the U.S.
  • EB-5 — Immigrant investor visa. This is an immigrant visa (not non-immigrant like H-1B), and carriers generally treat EB-5 holders similarly to green card applicants.
  • L-1 — Intracompany transferee visa. Well-regarded by carriers, particularly L-1A (managers/executives).
  • O-1 — Extraordinary ability visa. Accepted by most carriers that work with foreign nationals.
  • TN / TD — USMCA (formerly NAFTA) visas for Canadian and Mexican professionals. Generally accepted with fewer restrictions than other non-immigrant visa categories.
  • K-1 / K-3 — Fiancé and spouse visas. Accepted by most carriers, often with the expectation of imminent green card application.

In general, if your visa type demonstrates a meaningful financial or family commitment to the U.S., you will have more carrier options and potentially higher coverage limits than someone on a temporary non-immigrant visa without clear long-term U.S. intent.

What to expect: Broader carrier acceptance than H-1B in most cases. E-2 and EB-5 holders especially benefit from demonstrating financial commitment. Standard to enhanced underwriting. Coverage limits depend on country classification and financial documentation.

F-1 Student Visa Holders

We will be straightforward: life insurance options for F-1 student visa holders are extremely limited. Most carriers will not issue a policy to someone on a student visa because the visa signals a temporary, non-employment-based stay in the U.S.

That said, options are not zero. A small number of carriers may consider F-1 applicants who:

  • Have been in the U.S. for at least 12 months
  • Hold an SSN or ITIN
  • Can demonstrate financial ties to the U.S. (such as family support or assets)
  • Are from a Class A or B country

Coverage amounts are typically limited — expect a maximum of $100,000–$250,000 in most cases. If you transition to H-1B or another work visa after graduation, your options expand significantly — planning ahead for that transition is worthwhile.

Realistic expectation: Very limited options. If coverage is available, it will typically be small term policies. If you transition to H-1B or another work visa after graduation, your options expand significantly.

DACA Recipients

DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) recipients occupy a unique space in the life insurance landscape. You are legally present in the U.S., you may have an SSN or ITIN, and you may have years of established U.S. ties — but your status is not a visa, green card, or citizenship, and not all carriers know how to classify it.

The good news: options do exist. Several carriers will consider DACA recipients who can provide:

  • A valid Employment Authorization Document (EAD)
  • An SSN or ITIN
  • A U.S. bank account
  • Proof of U.S. residency and ties

Both term and some permanent policies may be available depending on the carrier. Coverage limits are typically in the range of $100,000 to $500,000, though some carriers may offer more based on your financial documentation.

What to expect: Options exist but carrier selection is critical. Working with a broker who knows which companies accept DACA recipients will save you time and prevent unnecessary application denials on your record.

Undocumented Immigrants

We understand this is a sensitive topic, and we want to be direct: life insurance options for undocumented immigrants are limited, but they are not zero.

Some carriers will issue policies to undocumented applicants who can provide:

  • An ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number) — this is the most critical requirement
  • A valid form of identification
  • A U.S. bank account
  • Evidence of U.S. residency (typically at least 5 years)
  • Proof of income or employment

Available coverage is generally limited to term life insurance with maximum death benefits in the range of $50,000–$100,000. Some guaranteed issue or simplified issue products may also be available, though premiums will be higher.

Without an ITIN, options become extremely limited. If you do not currently have an ITIN, obtaining one should be a first step — the IRS issues ITINs regardless of immigration status to anyone who has a tax filing or reporting obligation.

Important: Life insurance companies are not immigration enforcement agencies. Applying for life insurance does not trigger any immigration reporting. Your application information is used solely for underwriting purposes. The priority is protecting your family — and limited coverage is better than no coverage.

Foreign Nationals Living Abroad (Non-Residents with U.S. Ties)

This is where foreign national life insurance becomes a sophisticated financial planning tool — and where our expertise matters most.

If you are a foreign national who does not reside in the United States but you have significant U.S. ties — real estate, business interests, a U.S.-citizen spouse, children studying in the U.S., or 20% or more of your assets in U.S.-situated investments — you may qualify for U.S.-based life insurance through select carriers.

This is the high-net-worth segment of the foreign national market, and the requirements reflect that:

  • Minimum net worth: Typically $5 million or more
  • U.S. assets: At least $200,000 or 25% of the requested coverage amount
  • Nexus documentation: Detailed proof of your U.S. connection (property deeds, business filings, family ties, tax obligations)
  • Country of residence: Must be a Class A or B country with most carriers
  • In-person requirements: The entire application process — solicitation, application, medical exam, policy delivery — must take place on U.S. soil (though some carriers now offer power of attorney for policy delivery post-COVID)
  • Financial documentation: Comprehensive financial statements, source of wealth verification, and for policies over $5M, third-party financial verification. For $10M+, an inspection report is typically required.

Coverage limits for qualifying non-residents from Class A countries can reach $30–$40 million in permanent life insurance with select carriers. For Class B countries, limits are similar but underwriting scrutiny increases. Class C countries have lower limits (up to $24 million) and more restricted rate class availability.

For non-resident foreign nationals, U.S. life insurance is not just a death benefit — it is a strategic financial instrument. The death benefit is generally exempt from U.S. federal estate tax, which makes it one of the most powerful tools to address the $60,000 vs. $15 million estate tax exemption disparity. Additionally, USD-denominated policies offer currency diversification, tax-advantaged cash value growth, and confidential wealth transfer outside the probate process.

Select carriers now also consider premium financing arrangements for high-net-worth foreign nationals — a significant shift from prior years when premium financing was unavailable to non-residents. For more details on premium financing, see our comprehensive premium financing guide.

Key Takeaway: Non-resident foreign national cases are among the most complex in life insurance — your country, your ties, your assets, your goals, and the carrier’s specific guidelines all interact. Every major carrier has a specialized underwriting team for these cases, and we work directly with those teams. The difference between a successful placement and a denied application often comes down to which carrier you submit to first and how the case is positioned. This is what we do.

Beyond the Death Benefit: Advanced Strategy

For high-net-worth individuals looking beyond traditional death benefit protection, U.S.-based permanent life insurance can serve as the foundation of a broader wealth building strategy — functioning as a USD-denominated asset with guaranteed growth, tax-advantaged access, and estate tax protection built in. If conventional financial advice has left you sensing something’s missing, explore how cash value life insurance works as a strategic asset.

Estate Tax Planning for Foreign Nationals (2026 Update)

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If you are a foreign national with U.S. assets, understanding the estate tax landscape is not optional — it is essential. The disparity between what U.S. citizens and non-residents receive in estate tax protection is one of the most significant financial planning issues you will face, and life insurance is one of the most effective tools to address it.

“Most foreign nationals we work with are shocked to learn their U.S. estate tax exemption is $60,000 — not $15 million. That single number changes the entire planning conversation. Life insurance becomes less of a ‘nice to have’ and more of a structural necessity for protecting what they’ve built.”

— Steve Gibbs, Esq., Estate Planning Attorney, Insurance and Estates

The $60,000 vs. $15 Million Disparity

Tax Feature U.S. Citizens & Domiciled Residents Non-Resident Foreign Nationals
Federal Estate Tax Exemption $15,000,000 per person $60,000
Married Couple Combined $30,000,000 $60,000 (no portability)
Indexed to Inflation? Yes — adjusts annually No — unchanged for decades
Maximum Tax Rate 40% 40%
Spousal Transfer (Annual Gift) Unlimited marital deduction $194,000 annually (2026) to non-citizen spouse
Sunset Provision? No — made permanent by One Big Beautiful Bill Act N/A — $60K has never changed

What This Means in Real Numbers

Consider a non-resident foreign national who owns $2 million in U.S. real estate and holds $500,000 in U.S. corporate stock:

U.S.-Situated Assets $2,500,000
Estate Tax Exemption ($60,000)
Taxable Estate $2,440,000
Approximate Federal Estate Tax (up to 40%) ~$976,000

Without proper planning, nearly 40% of this person’s U.S. assets could be consumed by estate taxes. And critically, the IRS expects payment within 9 months of death — meaning heirs may be forced to sell real estate or liquidate investments under pressure just to cover the tax bill.

Estate Tax Treaty Countries

The U.S. has estate tax treaties with 15 countries that may provide more favorable treatment for their nationals. Treaty benefits can significantly reduce or eliminate the estate tax disparity by allowing non-residents to claim a proportional share of the full U.S. exemption.

Countries with U.S. estate tax treaties include: Australia, Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, South Africa, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.

If your country of origin has a treaty with the U.S., you may qualify for substantially better estate tax treatment — but treaty benefits require careful compliance, proper documentation, and often disclosure of worldwide assets. If your country does not have a treaty, planning becomes even more critical.

Why Life Insurance Is the Strategic Solution

Life insurance death benefit proceeds are generally exempt from U.S. federal estate tax for non-resident foreign nationals. This makes life insurance one of the most efficient tools available to address the estate tax gap:

  • Liquidity on demand: The death benefit provides immediate funds to cover estate tax liabilities without forcing heirs to liquidate real estate or investments.
  • Estate tax exemption: Life insurance proceeds on the life of a non-resident, non-citizen are generally not considered U.S.-situs property and are therefore not subject to estate tax.
  • Trust structures: When combined with an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT), the death benefit can be further protected from both U.S. and foreign estate tax claims. For foreign nationals, the trust structure depends heavily on your country of domicile and whether a treaty applies.
  • Currency stability: A USD-denominated death benefit provides protection against home currency volatility for your beneficiaries.
Key Takeaway: The right estate tax strategy for a foreign national depends on your country of domicile, whether a treaty applies, your asset structure, and your long-term intentions regarding U.S. presence. There is no generic answer — a British citizen with London real estate and U.S. investments faces a completely different planning landscape than a Chinese national with property in New York. This is exactly why our team includes a licensed estate planning attorney who works directly with your tax advisor and our carrier underwriting teams to structure the right solution. Schedule a consultation to discuss your specific situation.

Note: This information is for educational purposes and should not be construed as tax or legal advice. Estate tax planning for foreign nationals involves complex interactions between U.S. federal law, state law, treaty law, and the laws of your home country. Always consult with qualified tax and legal professionals regarding your individual situation.

Best Life Insurance Companies for Foreign Nationals (2026 Update)

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Important: There is no single “best” life insurance company for foreign nationals. The right carrier depends on your country of origin, immigration status, coverage amount, policy type, and financial goals. Every carrier on this list has a specialized foreign national underwriting team — the key is matching your specific situation to the carrier whose guidelines give you the best outcome. As an independent agency with access to all of these carriers, we do this matching for you.

Tier 1: Best for High-Net-Worth Foreign Nationals & Estate Planning

These carriers offer the highest coverage limits, the strongest permanent life insurance products, and the most sophisticated underwriting for complex foreign national cases. Best suited for clients seeking $1M+ in coverage for estate planning, wealth transfer, or asset protection.

Carrier Strength for Foreign Nationals Whole Life IUL Term Notable Feature
Penn Mutual Top-tier whole life dividends; strong FN underwriting ✓ ✓ ✓ Record $300M dividend payout (2026); ACE accelerated underwriting up to $5M
MassMutual Exceptional financial strength; 158+ years of consecutive dividends ✓ ✗ ✓ Conversion to universal life up to age 90
Guardian Life Global Citizens Program for non-resident HNW clients ✓ ✗ ✓ Dedicated FN case concierge; complimentary U.S. trust review
New York Life Largest mutual insurer; strong estate planning portfolio ✓ ✗ ✓ Broad country acceptance; flexible medical underwriting
Northwestern Mutual Highest cash value growth among mutuals; sophisticated planning ✓ ✗ ✓ Strong for long-term wealth accumulation strategies

Tier 2: Best for Broad Visa Eligibility & Flexible Coverage

These carriers accept a wider range of visa types and country classifications. Good balance of coverage options and accessibility.

Carrier Strength for Foreign Nationals Whole Life IUL Term Notable Feature
Prudential Liberalized FN underwriting post-COVID; wide visa acceptance ✓ ✓ ✓ Relaxed nexus requirements; flexible POA for policy delivery
AIG Extensive global reach; multi-policy flexibility ✓ ✓ ✓ Strong for expatriates and foreign nationals with global assets
John Hancock Liberalized FN guidelines post-COVID; good country coverage ✓ ✓ ✓ Vitality wellness program; flexible underwriting
Lincoln Financial Relaxed FN underwriting; strong IUL portfolio ✗ ✓ ✓ Competitive IUL options for accumulation-focused clients
Transamerica Broad product range; accessible underwriting ✓ ✓ ✓ Full product suite across term and permanent
Pacific Life Liberalized FN guidelines; strong UL/IUL options ✗ ✓ ✓ Competitive accumulation-focused IUL products

Tier 3: Best for Simplified Access & Broader Acceptance

More accessible underwriting, including simplified issue and no-exam options. May accept a wider range of applicant profiles, though coverage limits may be lower.

Carrier Strength for Foreign Nationals Whole Life IUL Term Notable Feature
Foresters Financial Accessible underwriting; member benefits ✓ ✗ ✓ Fraternal benefits; community-oriented organization
Protective Life Competitive term rates; good GUL options ✗ ✓ ✓ Strong guaranteed universal life for lifetime coverage at lower cost
State Farm Well-known brand; straightforward products ✓ ✗ ✓ Widely accessible; tailored customer support for non-residents
Symetra Liberalized FN guidelines post-COVID ✗ ✓ ✓ Competitive UL/IUL options; streamlined application
Lafayette Life Strong whole life products; mutual company ✓ ✗ ✓ Competitive whole life dividends; policyholder-owned
Key Takeaway: Every major carrier listed above has a dedicated foreign national underwriting team that wants your business — Guardian is not unique in this regard. The difference is not which carrier has the best “program.” The difference is whether your agent understands which carrier’s guidelines best match your specific country, visa type, coverage amount, and financial goals. As an independent agency, we submit to the carrier that gives you the strongest offer — not the one that pays us the most.

Disclaimer: Carrier guidelines for foreign nationals change frequently. Country classifications, visa requirements, and coverage limits vary by carrier and are subject to underwriting review. The information above reflects general carrier positioning as of 2026 and should not be construed as a guarantee of eligibility or coverage. Contact us for current carrier-specific guidelines for your situation.

Life Insurance Policy Definitions

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It is important to know the characters in the play when seeking out, designing and implementing your life insurance plan. The main definitions to know when looking for life insurance as a non US resident or foreign national include: Policy, Owner, Insurer, Insured, Beneficiary, Insurance Premiums, Death Benefit and Cash Value.

  • Policy: A policy is the binding contract between the owner and the insurer. The insurer is bound to the terms of the contract and cannot cancel the life insurance policy except for non payment of premium payments.
  • Owner: The owner of the policy is the party that enters into the binding legal contract between the owner and the life insurance company.
  • Insurer: The insurer, aka the carrier, aka the company, is the entity that guarantees the terms of the contract. All policy guarantees are backed by the viability of the company issuing the life insurance policy.
  • Insured: the insured is the individual that the policy is covering. The insured is often the same person as the owner, although that is not necessarily a requirement.
  • Beneficiary: the beneficiary is the person or entity that receives the life insurance death benefit from the insurer upon the death of the insured.
  • Insurance Premiums: life insurance premiums are the payment due to keep the policy active and in force on the life of the insured.
  • Death Benefit: the death benefit is the amount of payout that will go to the beneficiary upon the death of the insured, minus any outstanding policy loans. You can decide how you want the death benefit to go to your beneficiary in advance, including as a lump sum, interest only, or as payment over a set number of years.
  • Cash Value: the policy’s cash surrender value is the amount of money that is accumulating in the permanent life insurance, that can be accessed through surrender of the policy, withdrawals or used as collateral for policy loans.
  • Simplified Issue: A life insurance policy that does not require a medical exam. Instead, the applicant will need to provide answers to health and lifestyle questions.

What Types of Life Insurance Can a Foreign National or Non-US Citizen Get?

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A qualifying applicant can get any of the three types of life insurance, which include term life insurance, universal life insurance and whole life insurance.

  • A term life insurance policy provides coverage for a specified period, offering a death benefit without a cash value component.
  • A universal life insurance policy is permanent and offers more flexibility in premiums and death benefits than a whole life policy.
  • A whole life insurance policy is also a form of permanent life insurance with a fixed premium and a cash value component that grows over time.

Comparing Policy Types for Foreign Nationals

Feature Term Life Whole Life Universal Life (GUL) Indexed Universal Life (IUL)
Coverage Duration 10–30 years Lifetime Lifetime (if funded properly) Lifetime (if funded properly)
Cash Value None Guaranteed growth + dividends Minimal Index-linked growth with floor protection
Premium Structure Fixed, lowest cost Fixed, highest cost Flexible Flexible
Availability for Visa Holders Broadest — most carriers offer Requires stronger U.S. ties Requires stronger U.S. ties Requires stronger U.S. ties
Estate Tax Planning Death benefit only Strong — guaranteed death benefit + cash value asset Death benefit focused — lower cost lifetime coverage Growth potential — accumulation + death benefit
Portability (If You Leave the U.S.) Generally portable Generally portable — cash value access may be restricted abroad Generally portable — premium logistics may change Generally portable — policy changes may be restricted abroad
Best For Income replacement; visa holders needing affordable coverage; temporary U.S. stays Estate planning; guaranteed wealth transfer; HNW clients seeking certainty and a USD-denominated asset Lifetime death benefit at the lowest permanent insurance cost; estate tax liquidity Accumulation + death benefit; clients wanting growth potential with downside protection
Key Takeaway: The right policy type depends entirely on your purpose. If you need temporary income replacement while on a work visa, term life is usually the simplest and most affordable path. If you are a high-net-worth foreign national with U.S. assets and estate tax exposure, permanent life insurance — whether whole life, GUL, or IUL — becomes a strategic planning tool, not just a death benefit. We match the product to the purpose based on your specific situation.
Policy Selection Guidance (2026): Term life insurance is generally easier to obtain for non-residents, while permanent policies (whole, universal) often require stronger U.S. ties and more comprehensive documentation. For high-net-worth individuals seeking wealth transfer and estate planning solutions, permanent policies offer strategic advantages despite the more rigorous application requirements.

What Happens to Your Life Insurance If You Leave the U.S.?

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This is one of the most common questions we hear from foreign nationals — and one of the most important to address before you buy a policy, not after.

The short answer: most U.S. life insurance policies pay the death benefit regardless of where in the world the insured passes away. Your beneficiaries do not need to be in the U.S. to receive the proceeds (though payment typically goes to a U.S. bank account).

But the full answer is more nuanced, and it depends on your country of destination, the type of policy you own, the carrier, and how the policy was structured from the beginning.

Death Benefit — Generally Worldwide Coverage

Most carriers provide worldwide death benefit coverage. If you purchase a policy while living in the U.S. on a valid visa and later return to your home country or relocate elsewhere, the death benefit will generally still pay out. However, there are exceptions:

  • Some carriers have exclusions for deaths in countries subject to U.S. sanctions (OFAC list)
  • If you relocate to a high-risk country, the carrier may require notification and could restrict certain policy features
  • You are typically required to notify the carrier of a change in residency

Cash Value Access — This Is Where It Gets Complicated

If you own a permanent policy (whole life, universal life, IUL) with cash value, relocating abroad can affect your ability to access that cash value:

  • Policy loans and withdrawals may be restricted or subject to different tax treatment depending on your new country of residence
  • Local financial regulations in your new country may restrict holding financial products from foreign companies
  • Some carriers will not process policy changes (beneficiary updates, coverage adjustments, premium changes) for policyholders residing outside the U.S.
  • Tax implications can become complex — cash value growth may be treated differently under your new country’s tax laws

Why Policy Design From Day One Matters

This is the critical point most articles miss: the decisions you make when the policy is designed — the carrier you choose, the policy type, the ownership structure, the trust arrangement — all determine how smoothly a future relocation will go.

If there is any possibility you will leave the U.S. at some point in the future, that needs to be part of the conversation from the very beginning. Your country of destination, your expected timeline, your financial goals for the policy — all of these factor into which carrier and which structure make sense.

An agent focused on getting the policy issued today without thinking about what happens in five or ten years is doing you a disservice. We structure every foreign national case with the long-term picture in mind — because your life circumstances will change, and your policy needs to be built to accommodate that.

Key Takeaway: Most policies pay the death benefit worldwide — that part is straightforward. The complications arise with cash value access, premium logistics, policy changes, and tax treatment after relocation. The right policy design from day one, matched to the right carrier, eliminates most of these issues before they start.

Step-by-Step Application Process for Foreign Nationals

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The application process for foreign national life insurance is more involved than a standard U.S. citizen application, but it is manageable when you work with a team that handles these cases regularly. Here is what to expect:

Step 1: Initial Consultation & Assessment

We begin by understanding your complete picture: immigration status, country of origin, visa type (if applicable), U.S. ties, financial goals, how long you plan to be in the U.S., and what you are trying to accomplish with the coverage.

Step 2: Carrier Matching

Based on your profile, we identify the carriers whose foreign national underwriting guidelines best match your situation. A captive agent is limited to one carrier’s rules. We match you to the carrier (or carriers) that give you the best chance of approval at the best terms.

Step 3: Documentation Gathering

You will need to assemble the following (specific requirements vary by carrier):

  • Valid passport with visa documentation (if applicable)
  • Green card or permanent resident card (if applicable)
  • SSN or ITIN (or W-8BEN if neither is available)
  • U.S. bank account statements (typically 3–6 months)
  • Proof of U.S. address (utility bills, lease agreement, or property deed)
  • Financial documentation — income verification, net worth statement, and for policies over $5M, third-party financial verification
  • Verification of visa status and remaining duration
  • For non-residents: detailed nexus documentation showing your U.S. ties

Step 4: Application Submission

The application must be completed on U.S. soil. This includes signing the application, answering health and lifestyle questions, and completing the Foreign Travel/National Questionnaire. Plan to be in the U.S. for up to 90 days, though many cases move faster.

Step 5: Medical Underwriting

Most policies require a medical exam performed in the U.S.:

  • Paramedical exam (height, weight, blood pressure, medical history review)
  • Blood profile and urine specimen
  • Resting EKG or treadmill EKG (based on age and coverage amount)

Step 6: Financial Underwriting

The carrier reviews your financial documentation to verify that the coverage amount is justified. For policies over $5M, third-party financial verification is standard. For $10M+, an inspection report is typically required.

Step 7: Foreign National Underwriting Review

The carrier’s specialized team evaluates your country classification, visa status, U.S. ties, travel patterns, and occupation. Turnaround ranges from 1–2 weeks for straightforward cases to 8–12 weeks for complex ones.

Step 8: Policy Approval & Delivery

Once approved, the policy must be delivered to you in the U.S. in the state where it was issued. Post-COVID, several carriers now offer more flexibility with power of attorney for policy delivery.

Step 9: Ongoing Policy Management

After the policy is issued, maintain premium payments from a U.S. bank account. If your circumstances change — visa status, country of residence, beneficiary updates — notify us and the carrier. We remain your point of contact for the life of the policy.

Key Takeaway: The biggest risk in the foreign national application process is applying to the wrong carrier. A denial creates an application record that other carriers can see. This is why we pre-qualify every case before submission — we know each carrier’s specific guidelines for your country, visa type, and coverage amount, and we only submit to carriers where we expect approval. Start with a consultation so we can match your situation to the right carrier from the beginning.

Country Eligibility & Classification (2026 Update)

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Insurance carriers classify countries into tiers (typically A, B, C, and sometimes D or U) based on economic stability, political risk, healthcare access, and other factors. Your country classification directly impacts your coverage limits, available rate classes, and underwriting requirements. Classifications vary by carrier — a country rated “A” by one carrier may be “B” with another.

Classification Max Permanent Coverage Best Rate Class Non-Resident Threshold Example Countries
Class A Up to $40,000,000 Preferred Plus 6+ months outside U.S./year UK, Australia, Japan, Germany, France, South Korea, Singapore
Class B Up to $40,000,000 Best available (varies) 3+ months outside U.S./year China, Mexico, Brazil, Russia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt
Class C Up to $24,000,000 Preferred (no Pref Plus) Varies by carrier India, Colombia, Philippines, Indonesia, Pakistan, South Africa
Restricted N/A N/A N/A OFAC-sanctioned; countries prohibiting foreign insurance purchase
Important nuance: Some countries have multiple classifications depending on the region. For example, large metropolitan areas in China (Beijing, Shanghai) may be classified as Class A by certain carriers, while rural areas may be Class B or C. Your specific city of residence can affect your classification. This is another reason carrier matching matters.

The following lists are subject to change and may not reflect every carrier’s current classifications. Contact us for current carrier-specific country classifications for your situation.

Most of our business are Non-US residents of China and Mexico, both currently “B” countries. However, there are many other countries that may be considered.

Residents of the following countries may be considered for U.S. based life insurance

Antigua, Aruba, Australia, Austria, Bahamas, Bahrain, Barbados, Barbuda, Belgium, Belize, Bermuda, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada (except British Colombia and Manitoba), Cayman Islands, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Curacao, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Germany, Greece, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana, Holland, Honduras, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Marshall Islands, Mexico, Monaco, Montserrat, Morocco, Netherlands, Netherlands Antilles, Nicaragua, Norway, Pakistan, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Maarten, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Trinidad, Tobago, Turkey, Turks & Caicos, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Venezuela, Vietnam

Countries that have laws that prohibit the sale of life insurance to their residents include:

Argentina, Canadian Provinces of Alberta, British Columbia and Manitoba, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Hungary, India, Japan, Panama and Spain.

Citizens of other countries living in Czech Republic and Spain may still be eligible.

Resident vs Non US Resident: Life insurance companies will consider you non-U.S. residents if you live or travel outside the U.S. for more than three months a year for “B” countries and over six months a year for “A” countries.

List of “A” Countries:

A Non-Resident Alien from an “A” or “B” country, living in the U.S. full time on a valid visa can qualify for up to $40,000,000 of permanent life insurance with specific carriers. In addition, applicants from A or B countries can qualify for the best rate class.

Albania, American Samoa, Andorra, Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Aruba, Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Barbados, Barbuda, Belgium, Bermuda, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Brunei, Bulgaria, Canary Islands, Cayman Islands, Chile, Cook Islands, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominica, Estonia, Falkland Islands, Finland, France, French Guiana, French Polynesia, Germany, Greece, Greenland, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Israel (excluding Gaza and West Bank), Japan, Jordan, Kosovo, Kuwait, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macau, Macedonia, Malta, Marshall Islands, Martinique, Monaco, Montenegro, Montserrat, Netherlands, Netherlands Antilles, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Northern Mariana Islands, Norway, Oman, Palau, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, San Marino, Serbia, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Turks/Caicos, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Uruguay, Vatican City, Virgin Islands (U.S. and British)

List of “B” Countries

Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Belarus, Brazil, Cape Verde, China, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, French Guiana, Georgia, Jamaica, Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Libya, Malaysia, Maldives, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Mongolia, Morocco, Niue, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Russia, Samoa, Saudi Arabia, Seychelles, Sri Lanka, Suriname, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Vietnam

List of “C” Countries

A Non-Resident Alien from an “C” country, living in the U.S. full time on a valid visa can qualify for up to $24,000,000 of permanent life insurance with specific carriers. In addition, applicants from C countries can qualify for the preferred rate class (preferred plus rate class not available).

Bangladesh, Belize, Bolivia, Botswana, Colombia, Comoros, El Salvador, Colombia, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Kiribati, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Namibia, Nauru, Nepal, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Philippines, Solomon Islands, South Africa, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, Venezuela, West Bank

High Net Worth Client Focus (2026 Update)

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Recent years have seen a notable shift toward high-net-worth foreign nationals in the U.S. life insurance market. This trend has brought both stricter financial requirements and more flexible coverage options.

HNW Eligibility Thresholds: For high-net-worth foreign nationals, carriers are typically looking for:

  • Minimum net worth of $5 million
  • U.S. assets of at least $200,000 or 25% of the coverage amount
  • Stronger documentation of U.S. ties
  • Cleaner medical histories for large permanent policies

Coverage limits have expanded significantly, with some carriers now offering up to $30-40 million in coverage for qualifying foreign nationals. However, this comes with more stringent financial and medical underwriting requirements.

According to recent market analyses, premium financing arrangements—previously unavailable to foreign nationals—are now being considered by select carriers for high-net-worth clients, making larger policies more accessible. For details, see our comprehensive premium financing guide.

Asset Protection & Portfolio Diversification

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For high-net-worth foreign nationals, U.S.-based life insurance offers significant advantages beyond traditional death benefit protection. Recent guidance has emphasized life insurance as a powerful tool for asset protection and portfolio diversification, particularly amid global economic uncertainty.

Strategic Benefits for HNW Foreign Nationals:

  • Asset Protection: Life insurance policies can provide protection from creditors in many jurisdictions
  • Currency Diversification: USD-denominated policies offer protection against home currency volatility
  • Tax-Advantaged Growth: Cash value accumulation in permanent policies grows tax-deferred
  • Estate Liquidity: Provides funds to address the limited $60,000 estate tax exemption for non-residents
  • Privacy: Offers confidential wealth transfer outside of probate process

According to recent industry analyses, there’s been a notable trend of foreign nationals using U.S. life insurance as part of a broader wealth preservation strategy, particularly as global financial volatility has increased since 2023.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I get life insurance in the U.S. if I’m not a citizen?

Yes. Foreign nationals, non-U.S. residents, green card holders, visa holders, and in some cases undocumented immigrants can obtain U.S.-based life insurance. Eligibility depends on your immigration status, country of origin, U.S. ties, and the specific carrier’s underwriting guidelines. Green card holders have the broadest access; visa holders and non-residents with U.S. ties have more limited but still viable options.

Do I need a Social Security number to buy life insurance?

No. While a Social Security number (SSN) simplifies the process, you can apply with an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) instead. The IRS issues ITINs regardless of immigration status to anyone with a tax filing obligation. Some carriers may also accept a W-8BEN (Certificate of Foreign Status). If you have neither an SSN nor an ITIN, obtaining an ITIN should be your first step.

Can I get life insurance on an H-1B visa?

Yes, many carriers accept H-1B visa holders, though the H-1B is classified as a non-immigrant visa (temporary intent), which means fewer carriers will underwrite it compared to green card holders. You will typically need at least 12 months of continuous U.S. residency, an SSN or ITIN, a U.S. bank account, and your country of origin must be on the carrier’s approved list.

How long do I need to live in the U.S. before I can get life insurance?

It depends on the carrier and your immigration status. Green card holders may be eligible immediately with some carriers, though many require 1–2 years of permanent residency. Visa holders typically need at least 12 months of continuous U.S. residency, though some carriers require up to 5 years. Non-residents living abroad with U.S. ties follow different rules based on nexus documentation rather than residency duration.

Can my life insurance beneficiary live in another country?

Yes. Your beneficiary does not need to be a U.S. citizen or resident. The key requirement is insurable interest — the beneficiary must have a financial interest in your continued life. Death benefit payments are typically sent to a U.S. bank account with a 9-digit routing number, which may include U.S.-based banks with foreign branches.

What happens to my U.S. life insurance if I move back to my home country?

Most U.S. life insurance policies pay the death benefit worldwide regardless of where you reside at the time of death. However, relocating abroad can affect cash value access on permanent policies, premium payment logistics, the ability to make policy changes, and your tax obligations. The right policy design from day one can prevent most of these complications. Always notify the carrier of a change in residency.

How much does life insurance cost for foreign nationals?

In many cases, there is no cost difference between a foreign national and a U.S. citizen — the same health, age, and lifestyle factors determine your rate. However, your country of origin can affect pricing: applicants from Class A countries may qualify for the best rate classes, while Class B or C countries may face higher premiums or limited rate class availability.

Can undocumented immigrants get life insurance?

Options are limited but not zero. Some carriers will issue policies to undocumented applicants who can provide an ITIN, valid identification, a U.S. bank account, proof of at least 5 years of U.S. residency, and evidence of income. Available coverage is generally limited to term life insurance with death benefits in the $50,000–$100,000 range. Applying for life insurance does not trigger any immigration reporting.

What is the difference between the $60,000 and $15 million estate tax exemption?

U.S. citizens and domiciled residents receive a $15 million federal estate tax exemption per person (2026), made permanent under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Non-resident foreign nationals receive only a $60,000 exemption on U.S.-situated assets — and this figure is not indexed to inflation. At a top rate of 40%, this disparity creates significant tax exposure for non-residents with U.S. real estate, stocks, or other assets. Life insurance death benefit proceeds are generally exempt from estate tax for non-residents. The U.S. has estate tax treaties with 15 countries that may provide more favorable treatment.

Can high-net-worth foreign nationals use premium financing?

As of 2026, select carriers now consider premium financing arrangements for high-net-worth foreign nationals, though with stricter eligibility requirements. This represents a significant shift from prior years when premium financing was unavailable to foreign nationals. For details, see our comprehensive premium financing guide.

Which life insurance companies are best for foreign nationals?

There is no single best carrier — it depends entirely on your country, visa type, coverage amount, and financial goals. Top-tier carriers for HNW estate planning cases include Penn Mutual, MassMutual, Guardian, New York Life, and Northwestern Mutual. For broader visa eligibility and flexible coverage, Prudential, AIG, John Hancock, Lincoln Financial, and Pacific Life are strong options. Every major carrier has a specialized foreign national underwriting team. The key is matching your specific profile to the carrier whose guidelines give you the best outcome.

Do I need to be in the U.S. to apply for life insurance?

Yes. The entire application process — solicitation, application, medical exam, and policy delivery — must take place on U.S. soil. Plan to be in the U.S. for up to 90 days, though many cases move faster. Post-COVID, some carriers have introduced flexibility with power of attorney for policy delivery and digital application options.

Can a non-U.S. resident get life insurance without a medical exam?

Yes, some carriers now offer simplified issue or no-exam policies for foreign nationals, particularly for smaller coverage amounts from Class A countries. These options feature streamlined underwriting but typically come with higher premiums than medically underwritten policies.

Conclusion

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The market for life insurance for foreign nationals and non-U.S. residents has evolved significantly, with carriers liberalizing underwriting guidelines, introducing premium financing options, expanding digital application processes, and competing more aggressively for international business. For high-net-worth individuals in particular, these changes represent valuable new opportunities for wealth protection, estate tax planning, and multi-generational wealth transfer.

The substantial estate tax disparity — $60,000 exemption for non-residents versus $15 million for U.S. residents in 2026 — makes proper life insurance planning absolutely essential for any foreign national with U.S. assets. And the complexity of navigating country classifications, visa-specific requirements, carrier-specific guidelines, and cross-border tax implications means that working with the right team is not a luxury — it is a necessity.

You do not need to know everything in this guide. What you need is a team that does — one that understands foreign national cases inside and out, has relationships with every major carrier’s specialized underwriting desk, and will match your specific situation to the carrier and policy structure that gives you the strongest outcome.

That is what we do at Insurance and Estates.

Get Expert Guidance for Your Foreign National Life Insurance Case

Every foreign national case is different. Your country of origin, immigration status, U.S. ties, and financial goals all determine which carriers will compete for your business — and which policy structure protects your wealth long-term.

Our team has placed hundreds of foreign national cases across 40+ carriers, working directly with each carrier’s specialized underwriting team. We don’t represent one company. We represent you.

  • ✓ Independent access to 40+ carriers and their foreign national underwriting desks
  • ✓ Licensed estate planning attorney on staff for complex tax and trust strategies
  • ✓ Pre-qualification before submission — we only apply where we expect approval
  • ✓ Expertise across every visa type, country classification, and coverage level
  • ✓ Long-term policy design that accounts for relocation, changing status, and wealth transfer goals

Schedule your confidential consultation to discuss your specific situation.

No commitment. No pressure. Just professional guidance from a team that specializes in foreign national life insurance.


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8 comments

  • stephen
    stephen

    Hello there,

    I”m interested in Whole Life insurance in order to implement the infinite banking concept.

    Look forward to hearing from you

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Thank you. We will reach out to you shortly.

    • steve

      could you please delete my comment as contains personal information

      • Insurance&Estates
        A
        Insurance&Estates

        No problem. We will not publish your prior comment.

        Sincerely,

        I&E

  • Amalia L
    Amalia L

    I am interested in life insurance and will appreciate a phone number were I can call to provide all my info to get a quote.

    Please contact me.

    Amalia

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Amalia,

      Thank you for your interest.

      We can be reached at 877-787-7558.

      Looking forward to hearing from you.

      Sincerely,

      I&E

  • Vaa

    I very interested. But I need to see the plan and policy. Had a very bad experience with the previous insurance. I’m not really trusting Insurance nowadays please send me a quote

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Thanks for your interest and I’m sorry for your bad experience in the past. If you really would like to work on a plan and policy design, it would be good to discuss your situation and goals in more detail. Please feel free to e-mail me directly at steve@insuranceeandestates.com to begin the conversation. We are committed to transparency, open sharing of information and ONLY providing solid strategic estate planning guidance. Whatever you decide, we appreciate your comments.

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