Modified Endowment Contract (MEC): The Good, The Bad, and When It’s Actually the Strategy

January 22, 2024
Written by: Steven Gibbs | Last Updated on: February 25, 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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Co-Written By: Steve Gibbs, JD, AEP® & Jason Herring

Steve Gibbs is an estate planning attorney and CEO of Insurance & Estates. Jason Herring is a Pro Client Guide with 16+ years specializing in high cash value policy design, licensed in all 50 states (Series 6, 63, 65). Jason has sat in over 400 client meetings designing policies around the MEC line — from max-funded whole life to single premium estate planning strategies.

Fact-checked by Jason Herring and Barry Brooksby (licensed insurance professionals)

Modified Endowment Contract (MEC): When Insurance Becomes a Tax Nightmare (or Opportunity)


Most people hear “Modified Endowment Contract” and immediately think they’ve done something wrong. Their advisor warns them about it like it’s a land mine buried inside their policy. But here’s what nobody tells you: a MEC isn’t always a mistake. Sometimes it’s the strategy. And sometimes, funding right up to the MEC line is exactly where the magic happens.

Whether you’re trying to avoid MEC status to preserve tax-free access to your cash value, or you’re considering a single premium policy for estate planning, understanding this boundary is the difference between using life insurance as a wealth-building tool and accidentally handing the IRS a portion of your gains.

TL;DR — What You Need to Know About MECs

  • A Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) is a life insurance policy funded beyond IRS limits, changing how withdrawals and loans are taxed
  • The 7-pay test sets the line — exceed it and your policy loses tax-free access to cash value during your lifetime
  • MEC status is permanent and irreversible, but the death benefit stays income-tax free
  • For estate planning and asset protection, a MEC can be a powerful tool — not a mistake
  • Sophisticated policyholders often max-fund right up to the MEC line to maximize cash value growth while preserving tax-free access

Bottom Line: Whether a MEC is a problem or an opportunity depends entirely on your strategy. Most advisors only teach you to avoid it. Below, we’ll show you when to avoid it, when to embrace it, and when to fund right up to the edge.

Why Trust This Guide

Insurance & Estates was founded in 2017 by Steve Gibbs, JD, AEP® and Jason Kenyon, Esq. — both estate planning attorneys with a combined 30+ years in financial services. This article was co-written with Jason Herring, who spent years as a wholesaler at Hartford and Prudential training advisors on advanced policy design before working directly with consumers. Jason has personally designed hundreds of policies that optimize around the MEC line — he knows the difference between a policy that accidentally MECs and one that’s deliberately max-funded to the edge. We hold contracts with all major mutual carriers and are not captive to any single company, which means we recommend what actually performs best for each client’s situation. See our Trustpilot reviews →

What Is a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC)?

A Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) is a life insurance policy that has received more premium funding than allowed under federal tax laws. When a policy crosses this threshold, it loses many of the tax advantages that make permanent life insurance attractive as a wealth-building tool during the policyholder’s lifetime.

Here’s the critical distinction: a MEC doesn’t stop being life insurance. The death benefit remains income-tax free. The cash value still grows tax-deferred. What changes is how the IRS treats your access to that cash value while you’re alive. Withdrawals, loans, and other distributions all get hit with less favorable tax treatment.

At Insurance & Estates, we don’t subscribe to the idea that there’s one plan or product that fits everyone. There are so many nuances involved in wealth building and asset protection that we typically create a unique plan for each client. The MEC boundary is one of those nuances — and understanding it is essential to designing a policy that actually works for your goals.

Why Do MECs Exist? The Tax Loophole Congress Closed

In the early 1980s, interest rates approached 20% and cash value life insurance offered something almost too good to be true: competitive returns inside a tax-sheltered wrapper. Policyholders could dump a lump sum — say $100,000 — into a $500,000 policy, watch the cash value grow at substantial rates, and then withdraw up to their basis or take loans against the gains completely tax-free.

Unlike virtually every other investment vehicle at the time, the cash value of a life insurance policy wasn’t taxed like a typical investment. This applied across the various types of permanent policies — dividend-paying whole life, indexed universal life, and variable universal life.

People figured this out fast. They started using life insurance policies primarily as tax shelters, paying massive premiums that far exceeded the actual cost of insurance. The government hadn’t anticipated this use, and when Congress caught on, they moved to close the loophole. The result was legislation that created the Modified Endowment Contract — a set of rules that put a ceiling on how quickly you could fund a policy while keeping its full tax advantages.

How TAMRA and IRC Section 7702 Changed the Rules

When the government determined that policyholders were exploiting the tax-sheltered status of life insurance, Congress responded with legislation designed to prevent people from using cash value policies as short-term savings vehicles.

Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act (TAMRA)

The Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988 (TAMRA) is the legislation that created the Modified Endowment Contract and the rules that govern which policies qualify as a MEC. TAMRA established three criteria:

  1. The policy was entered into after June 20, 1988
  2. The policy meets the statutory definition of a life insurance contract
  3. The policy fails the seven-pay test

The first two are straightforward — you know when your policy was written and whether it’s a life insurance contract. The third is where it gets important.

IRC Section 7702 Requirements

Under IRC Section 7702, Congress established limits on how much money can go into a life insurance policy within a set period of time. Exceed those limits and the policy becomes a Modified Endowment Contract, fundamentally changing how you’re taxed when accessing the cash value.

What Is the 7-Pay Test and How Does It Work?

The name actually tells you what it is — a test based on seven years of payments.

A policy fails the 7-pay test and becomes a Modified Endowment Contract if the cumulative premiums paid exceed the amount required to cause the policy to be fully paid up within seven years. In other words, if you’re on pace to have a completely paid-up policy in fewer than seven years, you’ve crossed the line.

Insurance companies apply the 7-pay test in two situations:

  1. At policy inception: The insurer tests the total premium payments projected over the first seven years to verify they stay within the 7-pay limit.
  2. After a material change: If you reduce the death benefit or make another significant policy change, the 7-pay test resets. This recalculation may or may not trigger MEC status depending on the cumulative premiums relative to the new limits.

This is why policy design matters so much from day one. The relationship between your death benefit amount, your premium payments, and your paid-up additions all factor into where your policy sits relative to the MEC line.

Key Takeaway: The 7-pay test isn’t just a limit to avoid — it’s a design parameter. The closer you fund to the MEC line without crossing it, the more cash value your policy builds in the early years. This is precisely why policy design expertise matters.

How Do Insurance Companies Monitor for MEC Status?

If you’re reading this and wondering whether your policy is at risk, the good news is that you don’t have to run the numbers yourself.

Your insurance company typically performs MEC tests monthly on all active policies. If your premiums are approaching the limit, you’ll be notified. You will get a warning — just make sure you’re opening your mail when the insurance company is the sender.

Even if your premiums exceed the 7-pay test, the government gives your insurer 60 days to return the overage to you before MEC status triggers. That’s a built-in safety net most policyholders don’t know about.

For peace of mind, you can always call your agent and ask what the max-pay is for the current year. If your max-pay is $20,000 in annual premiums and you’re paying $1,000 per month, you know you’re well within the limits. If you’re deliberately maximizing your paid-up additions, this number becomes even more important — you want to push as close to it as possible without crossing it.

What Happens If Your Policy Becomes a MEC?

One of the key benefits of permanent life insurance is that cash value grows tax-deferred and withdrawals follow a First In – First Out (FIFO) basis. That means you can take out withdrawals tax-free up to the amount you’ve paid in premiums (your basis).

When a policy becomes a MEC, that advantage disappears. Here’s exactly what changes:

MEC vs. Non-MEC: Tax Treatment Comparison
Feature Standard Policy (Non-MEC) Modified Endowment Contract (MEC)
Withdrawal Order FIFO — basis comes out first, tax-free LIFO — gains come out first, taxed as ordinary income
Early Withdrawal Penalty No age-based penalty 10% penalty on withdrawals before age 59½
Policy Loans Not taxable Treated as ordinary income, subject to taxation
Cash Value Growth Tax-deferred Tax-deferred (no change)
Death Benefit Income-tax free Income-tax free (no change)
Probate Bypasses probate Bypasses probate (no change)
Best For: Non-MEC policies are best for those who plan to access cash value during their lifetime through loans or withdrawals. MECs are best for estate planning, asset protection, or situations where lifetime access to cash value is not a priority.

Note: Tax treatment depends on individual circumstances. Consult a qualified tax advisor for guidance specific to your situation.

FIFO vs. LIFO: Why Withdrawal Order Matters

In a standard life insurance policy, withdrawals are treated as First In – First Out (FIFO). You withdraw your premium payments (basis) first, which are not taxable. Only after you’ve exhausted your basis do you start withdrawing taxable gains.

When a policy becomes a MEC, this flips to Last In – First Out (LIFO). Gains come out first, and they’re taxed as ordinary income. This is the same treatment you’d get from a non-qualified annuity — which means one of the primary tax advantages of life insurance disappears.

10% Early Withdrawal Penalty

MEC withdrawals for policyholders under age 59½ are subject to a 10% penalty, similar to early distributions from retirement vehicles like an IRA, 401(k), or qualified annuity. This penalty is in addition to the ordinary income tax on gains.

Policy Loans Become Taxable

This is the consequence that catches most people off guard. In a standard policy, you can take a loan against your cash value with no tax event. In a MEC, policy loans are treated as ordinary income and may be subject to income tax. For policyholders who planned to use their cash value as a source of tax-free income, this is a significant blow.

Key Takeaway: MEC status doesn’t destroy your policy — the death benefit and tax-deferred growth remain intact. What it destroys is your ability to access the cash value tax-free during your lifetime. If living benefits are central to your strategy, avoiding MEC status is critical.

Is a MEC Ever a Good Thing? Benefits of a Modified Endowment Contract

Here’s where most articles on this topic stop. They explain the downsides and essentially say “avoid MECs at all costs.” But that’s incomplete advice — and for some people, it’s flat-out wrong.

Single premium life insurance is by definition a Modified Endowment Contract, and there are situations where it’s the smartest move on the board.

MEC Benefits for Estate Planning & Asset Protection
Death Benefit Paid income-tax free to beneficiaries — no change from a standard policy
Probate Avoidance Passes directly to named beneficiaries outside the probate process
Creditor Protection Protected from creditors in many states
Leverage A $100,000 single premium can create a $500,000+ death benefit depending on age and health
Living Benefits May offer accelerated death benefits for chronic illness as an alternative to long-term care insurance
Best For: Individuals who have money they don’t need access to during their lifetime and want to maximize the tax-free transfer to beneficiaries while gaining creditor protection and probate avoidance.

Tax-Free Death Benefit

Even though a MEC loses its tax advantages for living benefits, the death benefit is still income-tax exempt. For someone whose primary goal is efficient wealth transfer — not lifetime cash access — this makes the MEC a legitimate estate planning vehicle.

Avoids Probate

Like all life insurance, a MEC death benefit passes directly to the named beneficiary. It’s private, incontestable after the contestability period, and doesn’t go through the probate process. For high-net-worth estate planning, this matters.

Creditor Protection

In many states, life insurance cash values and death benefits are protected from creditors. This applies to MECs as well, making them a useful asset protection tool for business owners, professionals, and anyone concerned about liability exposure.

Leverage Opportunities

This is where a MEC shines for the right person. Depending on your age and health classification, you can leverage a single premium into a death benefit that’s 5:1 or better. A $100,000 premium might produce a $500,000 to $750,000 death benefit. That’s a guaranteed return for your beneficiaries that no other financial product can match.

Liquidity Options

A MEC still provides liquidity, though accessing it comes with tax implications. You can withdraw cash, take a policy loan, or surrender paid-up additions. It’s not always the most efficient access point, but the money is there if you need it.

Accelerated Death Benefits

Many MEC policies include accelerated death benefit riders that allow you to access a portion of the death benefit if diagnosed with a chronic or terminal illness. This can serve as an alternative or supplement to long-term care coverage.

Key Takeaway: A MEC is not inherently bad. If you don’t need tax-free access to cash value during your lifetime, a MEC can be one of the most efficient estate planning and asset protection tools available. The question isn’t “is a MEC good or bad?” — it’s “does a MEC fit your strategy?”

Two Strategies Most Advisors Won’t Tell You About

Most content about MECs falls into one camp: “avoid it.” But experienced practitioners know there are actually two distinct strategies built around the MEC line, and understanding both is what separates sophisticated policy design from cookie-cutter advice.

Strategy 1: The Intentional MEC (Estate Planning Play)

Some clients come to us with a clear situation: they have money they won’t need during their lifetime, and they want to maximize what passes to their heirs tax-free. A single premium whole life policy — which is by definition a MEC — is often the most efficient way to accomplish this.

When an intentional MEC makes sense:

  • You have a lump sum (inheritance, business sale, retirement savings) earmarked for wealth transfer
  • You don’t need or plan to access the cash value during your lifetime
  • You want guaranteed leverage — turning $100,000 into $500,000+ for your beneficiaries
  • You need creditor protection and probate avoidance
  • You want accelerated death benefit riders as a long-term care alternative

This isn’t an accident. It’s a deliberate decision to exchange lifetime tax benefits for maximum estate efficiency.

Strategy 2: Max-Funding to the MEC Line (The Sweet Spot for Living Benefits)

This is the strategy that separates advisors who merely sell policies from those who design them.

When you’re using whole life insurance as financial infrastructure — for overfunded life insurance strategies, paid-up additions, or building a foundation for volume-based banking — you want to push as much premium into the policy as possible to accelerate cash value growth. But you need to stay below the MEC line to preserve tax-free access to that cash value through loans.

This means the 7-pay limit isn’t just a number to avoid. It’s a target to optimize toward.

How max-funding works in practice:

  • Your policy is designed with a death benefit large enough to create a high MEC corridor — room to pour in premium dollars
  • Paid-up additions (PUAs) are used to maximize cash value growth within the MEC limits
  • Your agent monitors the max-pay annually so you fund right up to the line without crossing it
  • The result: maximum early cash value accumulation with full tax-free access through policy loans

This is how properly designed whole life insurance becomes infrastructure for building wealth — not just a death benefit with a savings component. The MEC line is the guardrail, and the goal is to ride as close to it as possible.

Beyond the Basics: If the concept of using whole life insurance as financial infrastructure resonates with you — if conventional financial advice has left you sensing something’s missing — explore our guide on Volume-Based Banking to understand how the MEC line fits into a larger wealth-building system.

Key Takeaway: The MEC line creates two distinct strategies — one for estate planning (cross it deliberately) and one for living benefits (optimize right up to it). Knowing which strategy fits your situation is the most important decision you’ll make when designing a policy.

MEC Life Insurance Rates by Age

The following MEC life insurance rates are for informational purposes only and must be qualified for. Rates are from A-rated carriers and above for a preferred plus male at the age shown. The dollar figure represents how much one-time premium payment is required to qualify for the corresponding initial death benefit.

Age $100,000 Death Benefit $250,000 Death Benefit $500,000 Death Benefit $1,000,000 Death Benefit
30 $25,000 $62,500 $125,000 $250,000
40 $29,850 $74,625 $149,250 $298,500
50 $37,850 $94,625 $189,250 $378,500
60 $48,390 $120,975 $241,950 $483,900
70 $64,760 $161,900 $323,800 $647,600
80 $79,500 $198,750 $397,500 $795,000
Best For: The younger the applicant, the greater the leverage. A 30-year-old turns $25,000 into a $100,000 death benefit (4:1 leverage), while an 80-year-old gets approximately 1.26:1. For maximum estate planning efficiency, earlier funding produces significantly better returns for beneficiaries.

Since these are whole life insurance rates, the death benefit will increase over time as dividends are paid. Rates shown are illustrative and subject to underwriting approval. Female and other rate classes may differ. Contact us for a personalized quote.

Frequently Asked Questions About MECs

What is a Modified Endowment Contract in simple terms?

A Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) is a life insurance policy that’s been funded beyond the IRS limits — specifically, beyond what the 7-pay test allows. When this happens, the policy keeps its death benefit and tax-deferred growth, but you lose the ability to access cash value tax-free through withdrawals and loans during your lifetime.

Is a MEC good or bad?

Neither — it depends on your strategy. If you need tax-free access to your cash value during your lifetime (for self-banking strategies, retirement income, or business financing), MEC status is something to avoid. But if your goal is estate planning and you don’t need lifetime access, a MEC can be one of the most efficient wealth transfer tools available.

Can you undo a MEC? Can a policy go back to non-MEC status?

No. Once a life insurance policy becomes a Modified Endowment Contract, the designation is permanent for the life of the policy. It cannot be reversed. This is why careful policy design and premium monitoring are essential from day one.

How much can I put into my whole life policy without triggering a MEC?

Every policy has a unique MEC limit based on the death benefit amount, the insured’s age, and the policy design. Your NAIC-compliant illustration will specify the 7-pay premium — the maximum you can pay annually without triggering MEC status. Your agent can tell you the exact max-pay amount for your policy in any given year. For policies designed to maximize cash value through paid-up additions, this number is critical to track.

What is the 7-pay test?

The 7-pay test determines whether a life insurance policy becomes a MEC. If your cumulative premiums at any point during the first seven years exceed the amount that would fully pay up the policy in seven level payments, the policy fails the test and becomes a MEC. The test also resets if you make a material change to the policy, such as reducing the death benefit.

What happens to my taxes if my policy becomes a MEC?

Three things change: (1) Withdrawals switch from FIFO to LIFO, meaning gains come out first and are taxed as ordinary income; (2) Withdrawals before age 59½ face a 10% penalty; (3) Policy loans become taxable events. However, the death benefit remains income-tax free and cash value continues to grow tax-deferred.

How do insurance companies prevent accidental MEC status?

Insurance companies perform MEC tests monthly. If your premiums are approaching the limit, they’ll notify you. Even if you accidentally exceed the 7-pay test, there’s a 60-day grace period during which the insurer can return the overage to you. You can also proactively ask your agent for your max-pay amount each year.

When would someone intentionally choose a MEC?

Common scenarios include: estate planning when lifetime cash access isn’t needed; leveraging a lump sum (inheritance, business sale) into a larger tax-free death benefit; asset protection in states that protect life insurance from creditors; and situations where the accelerated death benefit rider provides a long-term care alternative. Single premium life insurance is always a MEC by design.

What is the difference between FIFO and LIFO withdrawals?

In a standard (non-MEC) policy, withdrawals are First In – First Out: you withdraw your premium basis first (tax-free), then gains (taxable). In a MEC, withdrawals are Last In – First Out: gains come out first (immediately taxable as ordinary income), then basis. This less favorable treatment is one of the primary reasons policyholders avoid MEC status when they plan to access cash value.

Does a MEC affect the death benefit?

No. A MEC designation does not change the death benefit. Beneficiaries still receive the full death benefit income-tax free. The MEC designation only affects the tax treatment of distributions (withdrawals and loans) made during the policyholder’s lifetime.

What does max-funding to the MEC line mean?

Max-funding to the MEC line means paying the maximum premium allowed under the 7-pay test without triggering MEC status. This strategy is used to accelerate cash value growth in overfunded whole life policies while preserving tax-free access to the cash value through policy loans. It requires precise policy design and ongoing monitoring but is the foundation of strategies like volume-based banking.

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41 comments

  • Samantha
    Samantha

    What is the advantage to the agent to sell a MEC? I am in the process of purchasing a Long Term care insurance policy and was told that I had to agree that the policy would be a MEC- even though I cannot see how my monthly premium payments would exceed the 7 pay rule. Doesn’t seem like it would be a good plan for me since I want the tax benefits of the cash value accessibility

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hello Samantha,

      I recommend that you reach out to our long term care insurance pro Jason Herring by emailing jason@insuranceandestates.com.

      Best,

      Steve Gibbs for I&E

      Steven Gibbs is a licensed insurance agent, and the following agent
      license numbers of Steven Gibbs are provided as required by state law:

      Resident License; AZ agent #17508301,
      Non-resident Licenses: TX agent #2273189, CA agent #0K10610,
      LA agent #769583, MA agent #2049963, MN agent #40563357,
      UT agent #655544.

  • Dan

    Consider a VUL that had withdrawals and loans and became a MEC.
    Taxes were paid on all loans and withdrawals as a penalty.
    Since the policy is now more akin to an annuity, does the carrier have the right to charge loan interest even tho the loan could be re-characterized as a distribution since the owner paid tax on the entire amount? Thanks

    • Steven Gibbs
      A
      Steven Gibbs

      Hello Dan, although we write about VULs and have an agent who is qualified to help folks with this, we do not tend to promote or focus on VULs for the very reason you’re bringing up, specifically, the uncertainty in the performance due to market risk. As far as your question, a question about the “rights of an insurance company” is legal in nature and I suggest you connect with an attorney who is experienced in insurance litigation if this is truly a concern.

      Best, Steve Gibbs for I&E

      Steven Gibbs is a licensed insurance agent, and the following agent
      license numbers of Steven Gibbs are provided as required by state law:

      Resident License; AZ agent #17508301,
      Non-resident Licenses: TX agent #2273189, CA agent #0K10610,
      LA agent #769583, MA agent #2049963, MN agent #40563357,
      UT agent #655544.

  • Allan

    Hi. I (67-yo) bought single-pay MEC life insur contracts ($10,000 face) in 2014. In
    Sep 2021, i took $8,000 loans against each of 5 policies; (total $40k). I bought a total of eight policies in 2014. The 1099s arrived; code “1” is in block 7. I am taxed for all interest earned in all eight policies bought in 2014. The loan distribution ($40,000 check dated Sep 30, 2021 arrived by USPS a week later); the next day by ACH bank draw (Oct 1, 2021) I automatically repaid the $40k loan equally in each of 5 policies (total monthly repay $5,000); every month end I repaid $5,000. By Nov 30, 2021 (50+ days), I repaid $15,000; by end of year 2021 I repaid $20,000; today, I am almost done with repay. Question: are these repayments considered a rollover that will reduce my 1099 taxes? Thanks in advance.

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hello Allan, thanks for connecting. However, this is definately the arena to consult with a CPA as we cannot offer legal or tax advice, particularly in a blog comment setting.

      Best, Steve Gibbs for I&E

  • Daniel Farrell
    Daniel Farrell

    What happens after 7 years? Can you just put as much money as you want into your cash value? Or do you have to have an ADLR? If you want to increase what you have in your whole life cash value, what steps can you take after 7-years?

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hello Daniel, the 7 year rule is an ongoing limit on the amount of cash that can be added to the policy. For a thorough explanation, a great next step may be to connect with Barry Brooksby at barry@insuranceandestates.com.

      Best, Steve Gibbs for I&E

  • Audrey Pitts
    Audrey Pitts

    Really helpful and insightful article

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Thank you Audrey, always nice to receive thankful feedback:)

      Best, Steve Gibbs for I&E

  • Andre

    I’m buying life insurance for the first time and I just receive a notice about an MEC should I sign that note

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hello Andre, that is a question for your agent as we aren’t aware of your policy details.

      Best, Steve Gibbs for I&E

  • Jeff

    I had a whole life policy convert to a MEC 3 years ago and neither I not my agent were notified to be able to make an adjustment. How can I calculate the 7 pay limit to verify the insurance company was correct in performing their calculations? Assuming I’m stuck, is the only choice to start all over again with a new policy?This is for my daughter who is now 10.

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hi Jeff, that normally shouldn’t happen because the life insurance company is responsible to notify you of MEC issues. I suggest you reach out to Jason Herring at jason@insuranceandestates.com.

      Best, Steve Gibbs for I&E

  • C Patrick
    C Patrick

    I purchased a single premium life insurance which turned into a MEC – the insurance company never alerted me. What are my best options now for this account?

  • Pat Moore
    Pat Moore

    My mother has a single premium whole life policy which was established in 1982 for $40,000. Several years ago she borrowed $200,000 to buy a house. She was taxed on the loan not realizing it was a MEC. She was in the early stages of Alzheimer’s and just paid the taxes without telling her children. Last year we found out she had this loan and paid it back out of other funds she had. Now we are getting ready to put her in assisted living and would like to get this money to help pay for it. Would her basis on the policy now be the original $40,000 plus the $200,000 she already paid taxes on? That would leave about $60,000 to be taxed if she surrendered her policy, but we aren’t sure if she would have to pay taxes again on the $200,000.

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hello Pat, thanks for reading and commenting. We really can’t speak to that policy or situation, having not reviewed the policy nor having any familiarity with it or the withdrawals, etc. It would be all speculation at this point. I strongly recommend you go back to either your mother’s life insurance agent (if possible) or otherwise to the company directly and also consider possibly bringing in a tax adviser to determine basis, etc. If you find that the life insurance company may have made a mistake with the MEC, you may also need to consult with a civil litigation (plaintiff’s) attorney.

      Best,

      Steve Gibbs for I&E

  • Michelle O'Brien
    Michelle O'Brien

    I would like to what the top rated life insurance policies are that are tax free, that offer a tax free death benefit, that pay out the most dividend payouts that discloses the MEC guidelines/ requirements and that I can take out loans against it. I am looking for an insurance product that can be used as an investment vehicle, retirement vehicle, but also give me a tax free death benefit. Are there any agents who also give advice on how to invest with these type of vehicles?
    Thank you. I have read a few books about this topic, and your website was very informative..

  • Ben Frihauf
    Ben Frihauf

    Question: If you get past the 7 pay (year) window are you able to overfund the policy from that point on without danger of it becoming a MEC?
    Thank you,
    Ben

  • christine
    christine

    I have life insurance with MassMutual. It’s a MEC.
    The taxable gain per IRS, is $0.00.
    The Cost Basis is $53,877.
    I am curious if I’m able to receive a distribution of funds due to financial changes. The surrender value says one thing ( $8,000. and an agent states $6,000.
    I’m absolutely flummoxed with it all. Bottom line is, am I able to surrender this totally? Would I receive the surrender value or the cost basis amount? I’m 63 years old.
    Any information would be helpful. The agent isn’t helping me.
    Thank you!

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Christine,

      We’ll have an agent reach out to you ASAP, if one hasn’t already helped you out on our chat portal.

      Thanks,

      I&E

  • Shelby M
    Shelby M

    I have a couple of policies on my grand children that were sold as “college savings plans”. I will use the oldest grand daughter as an example of what I have recently discovered.

    When I took the policy out it was a $100,000 WL particpating contract on a 7 year old. I was advised to put a Lump Sum in of $10,000 on issue, pay the Annual premium of $416 per year and each year pay an additional $2,476 for something called a Level Premium Paid-Up Additions Rider in order to build “great” cash value for her college education use. This was done in 2013 and each year since I have made the Annual premium payment for the WL and the Level Premium Paid-Up Additions Rider. Upon the receipt of the Annual Statement I just inquired from the agent who sold me the polocies what the verbiage Modified Endowment Contract meant. The agent who sold this to me is no longer active in the business but when I called him he said “not to worry” that the insurance company at the end of 7 years would recalculate the premium deposits and that the Modified Endowment Contract verbiage would be removed and the contract would no longer be a Modified Endowment Contract and the funds would be available for my grand daughters college costs when she is ready to go to college. I have done some research on my own as a result of this happening and I understand there is a special taxation of a MEC and information about “even pay test”, but nowhere have I been able to find a source that tells me a MEC that is several years old can revert somehow back to being a non MEC policy. Can you shed any light on this for me please.
    Thank you,
    Shelby M

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Shelby,

      Thank you for visiting Insurance and Estates. I received your question about a MEC. Please give me a call. I would like to learn more about your policy so I can better answer your question. Thanks again

      Sincerely,

      Jason H

  • christine
    christine

    Thank you! This was very informative. I am a fan!

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Christine,

      We appreciate your feedback. Thank you for taking the time to let us know.

      All the best,

      I&E

  • ken Hoiland
    ken Hoiland

    question, if a policy holder takes out a loan on his ife policy that is alMEC, dose he have 60 days to repay it without the loan becoming taxable ? Policy was put in force in ’87. thanks

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hi Ken,

      I would check with your life insurance carrier. However, you might also be interested in this NY Times article from 1988. From the article regarding single premium whole life:

      First, [under the new tax law] it would no longer permit tax-free borrowing at a low interest rate against a policy’s cash value. Instead, the loans would be considered a taxable distribution to the extent that they represent a previously untaxed buildup in the cash value of the policy. If that were done, such loans would be treated in the same manner as recent distributions from annuity contracts.

      Finally a new penalty would be imposed on distributions on amounts received by policyholders penalty to the one on early distributions of Individual Retirement Accounts. The penalty would be 10 percent of the taxable amount.

      I am not sure if the policy you are referring to would be grandfathered in under the old laws or not.

      Sincerely,

      I&E

  • OA

    I bought a whole life policy over 20 years ago, the policy converted to MEC status, the insurance agent advertised the product as a tax-deferred saving product with a life insurance component.Could you provide me with any advice on how I can have the MEC status reversed?
    Thank You.

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      OA,

      Please be on the lookout for our email response to your MEC question.

      Thank you for stopping by.

      I&E

  • Sang

    I have a MEC account for over 10 years but, when the account was classfied as “MEC”, the insurance company did not give me an alert. Also, when I asked about “MEC” to the insurance agent, the agent did not have any knowledge. That was long time ago.
    Anyway, I still have it and it is insured for my kid, 17 years old. So, can you give me an advice what I can do for this “MEC” account? Do I need to cancel it ?
    Your prompt reply will be much appreciated.
    Best Regards,

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Mr. Sang,

      Thank you for your inquiry. We have sent a response to you vie the email you provided.

      Sincerely,
      I&E

  • Tom S

    What are the top rated life insurance companies offering MECs today?

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Tom,

      Thank you for the inquiry. We will reach out to you shortly via the contact info you provided.

      Sincerely,
      I&E

  • Sharlene
    Sharlene

    Our church’s whole life insurance policy became a MEC and the pastor neglected to alert the board of the MEC status because he was informed by the agent that 501cs are tax exempt and do not pay taxes on a MEC. Is this true?

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Hi Sharlene,

      Thank you for stopping by. And we sympathize with your Pastor’s MEC issue. However, your best option would be to consult an expert, such as a CPA or Tax Advisor who can help your Church out with some specific advice relevant to your Pastor’s MEC issue.

      Sorry we could not be more help.

      Sincerely,

      I&E

  • Tara

    If received notice of insurance policy being in MEC but paid back money within 30days is it still considered to have MEC’d?

    • Cristina Catojo
      Cristina Catojo

      How soon can I over fund an IUL? I have medical issues right now so I cant get am IUL for me, but i bought ( in 2020) one for my son and I am paying for it. Can I overfund it already? My savings is not making money in the bank.

      • Insurance&Estates
        A
        Insurance&Estates

        Hello Cristina, that is a question for your agent and not a blog post because they’ll have specific knowledge of your product in question. If you would like it reviewed by an independent agent, you can connect with Jason Herring who is our IUL expert at jason@insuranceandestates.com.

        Best, Steve Gibbs for I&E

    • Insurance&Estates
      A
      Insurance&Estates

      Tara,

      When a policy becomes a MEC, the insurance company should notify the client in writing and offer a refund of the premium that caused the MEC. There is no reason a policy should become a MEC without the company first alerting the owner. In fact, often the company will not apply the premium and will send it back to you if it will cause MEC status.

      Sincerely,
      I&E

  • Jane

    Great, easy to understand.

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