Nonforfeiture Options, Dividends, and Policy Loans

Imagine pouring water into a heavy oak barrel month after month. Every drop represents a premium payment on a permanent life insurance policy. Over the decades, that barrel fills up with a highly valuable reservoir of equity called cash value. If the policyowner suddenly encounters a financial hardship and stops pouring water in—meaning they stop paying their premiums—what happens to the water already inside?

The accumulation of cash value in a permanent life insurance policy is often conceptualized as slowly filling a heavy oak barrel with water over many decades.
The accumulation of cash value in a permanent life insurance policy is often conceptualized as slowly filling a heavy oak barrel with water over many decades.

The law dictates that the insurance company cannot simply confiscate the barrel. The equity belongs to the policyowner. This fundamental principle—that equity in a cash-value policy is protected—is the foundation of nonforfeiture law.

As a life insurance producer, you will routinely sit across from clients who are terrified of "losing everything" if they miss a payment. Your professional competence depends entirely on your ability to explain exactly how cash value is protected, accessed, and leveraged. We will deconstruct the mechanical rules governing nonforfeiture options, the distribution of mutual company dividends, the mechanics of policy loans, and the process of bringing a lapsed policy back from the dead.

© 2026 The Only Ever Inc. · Licensed CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 for noncommercial reuse with attribution. Reuse terms