(a) Format.  A basic illustration shall conform to the following requirements:

(1)  The illustration shall be labeled with the date on which it was prepared.

(2)  Each page, including any explanatory notes or pages, shall be numbered and show its relationship to the total number of pages in the illustration (e.g., the fourth page of a seven-page (7) illustration shall be labeled “page 4 of 7 pages”).

(3)  The assumed dates of payment receipt and benefit pay-out within a policy year shall be clearly identified.

(4)  If the age of the proposed insured is shown as a component of the tabular detail, it shall be issue age plus the numbers of years the policy is assumed to have been in force.

(5)  The assumed payments on which the illustrated benefits and values are based shall be identified as premium outlay or contract premium, as applicable. For policies that do not require a specific contract premium, the illustrated payments shall be identified as premium outlay.

(6)  Guaranteed death benefits and values available upon surrender, if any, for the illustrated premium outlay or contract premium shall be shown and clearly labeled guaranteed.

(7)  If the illustration shows any non-guaranteed elements, they cannot be based on a scale more favorable to the policy owner than the insurer’s illustrated scale at any duration. These elements shall be clearly labeled non-guaranteed.

(8)  The guaranteed elements, if any, shall be shown before corresponding non-guaranteed elements and shall be specifically referred to on any page of an illustration that shows or describes only the non-guaranteed elements (e.g., “see page one for guaranteed elements.”)

(9)  The account or accumulation value of a policy, if shown, shall be identified by the name this value is given in the policy being illustrated and shown in close proximity to the corresponding value available upon surrender.

(10)  The value available upon surrender shall be identified by the name this value is given in the policy being illustrated and shall be the amount available to the policy owner in a lump sum after deduction of surrender charges, policy loans and policy loan interest, as applicable.

(11)  Illustrations may show policy benefits and values in graphic or chart form in addition to the tabular form.

(12)  Any illustration of non-guaranteed elements shall be accompanied by a statement indicating that:

(i)  The benefits and values are not guaranteed;

(ii)  The assumptions on which they are based are subject to change by the insurer; and

(iii)  Actual results may be more or less favorable.

(13)  If the illustration shows that the premium payer may have the option to allow policy charges to be paid using non-guaranteed values, the illustration must clearly disclose that a charge continues to be required and that, depending on actual results, the premium payer may need to continue or resume premium outlays. Similar disclosure shall be made for premium outlay of lesser amounts or shorter durations than the contract premium. If a contract premium is due, the premium outlay display shall not be left blank or show zero unless accompanied by an asterisk or similar mark to draw attention to the fact that the policy is not paid up.

(14)  If the applicant plans to use dividends or policy values, guaranteed or non-guaranteed, to pay all or a portion of the contract premium or policy charges, or for any other purpose, the illustration may reflect those plans and the impact on future policy benefits and values.

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Terms Used In Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-6

  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Contract premium: means the gross premium that is required to be paid under a fixed premium policy, including the premium for a rider for which benefits are shown in the illustration. See Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-3
  • Guaranteed elements: means the premiums, benefits, values, credits, or charges under a policy of life insurance that are guaranteed and determined at issue. See Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-3
  • Illustrated scale: means a scale of non-guaranteed elements currently being illustrated that is not more favorable to the policy owner than the lesser of:

    (i)  The disciplined current scale; or

    (ii)  The currently payable scale. See Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-3

  • Illustration: means a presentation or depiction that includes non-guaranteed elements of a policy of life insurance over a period of years and that is one of the three (3) types defined in subsections (8)(i) — (8)(iii):

    (i)  "Basic illustration" means a ledger or proposal used in the sale of a life insurance policy that shows both guaranteed and non-guaranteed elements. See Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-3

  • Non-guaranteed elements: means the premiums, benefits, values, credits, or charges under a policy of life insurance that are not guaranteed or not determined at issue. See Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-3
  • Outlays: Outlays are payments made (generally through the issuance of checks or disbursement of cash) to liquidate obligations. Outlays during a fiscal year may be for payment of obligations incurred in prior years or in the same year.
  • Policy owner: means the owner named in the policy or the certificate holder in the case of a group policy. See Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-3
  • Premium outlay: means the amount of premium assumed to be paid by the policy owner or other premium payer out-of-pocket. See Rhode Island General Laws 27-62-3

(b) Narrative Summary.  A basic illustration shall include the following:

(1)  A brief description of the policy being illustrated, including a statement that it is a life insurance policy;

(2)  A brief description of the premium outlay or contract premium, as applicable, for the policy. For a policy that does not require payment of a specific contract premium, the illustration shall show the premium outlay that must be paid to guarantee coverage for the term of the contract, subject to maximum premiums allowable to qualify as a life insurance policy under the applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, Title 26 of the U.S. Code;

(3)  A brief description of any policy features, riders or options, guaranteed or non-guaranteed, shown in the basic illustration and the impact they may have on the benefits and values of the policy;

(4)  Identification and a brief definition of column headings and key terms used in the illustration; and

(5)  A statement containing in substance the following: “This illustration assumes that the currently illustrated non-guarantee elements will continue unchanged for all years shown. This is not likely to occur, and actual results may be more or less favorable than those shown.”

(c) Numeric Summary.

(1)  Following the narrative summary, a basic illustration shall include a numeric summary of the death benefits and values and the premium outlay and contract premium, as applicable. For a policy that provides for a contract premium, the guaranteed death benefits and values shall be based on the contract premium. This summary shall be shown for at least policy years five (5), ten (10) and twenty (20) and at age seventy (70), if applicable, on the three (3) bases shown below. For multiple life policies the summary shall show policy years five (5), ten (10), twenty (20) and thirty (30).

(i)  Policy guarantees;

(ii)  Insurer’s illustrated scale;

(iii)  Insurer’s illustrated scale used but with the non-guaranteed elements reduced as follows:

(A)  Dividends at fifty percent (50%) of the dividends contained in the illustrated scale used;

(B)  Non-guaranteed credited interest at rates that are the average of the guaranteed rates and the rates contained in the illustrated scale used; and

(C)  All non-guaranteed charges, including, but not limited to, term insurance charges, mortality and expense charges, at rates that are the average of the guaranteed rates and the rates contained in the illustrated scale used.

(2)  In addition, if coverage would cease prior to policy maturity or age one hundred (100), the year in which coverage ceases shall be identified for each of the three (3) bases.

(d) Statements.  Statements substantially similar to the following shall be included on the same page as the numeric summary and signed by the applicant, or the policy owner in the case of an illustration provided at time of delivery, as required in this chapter.

(1)  A statement to be signed and dated by the applicant or policy owner reading as follows: “I have received a copy of this illustration and understand that any non-guaranteed elements illustrated are subject to change and could be either higher or lower. The agent has told me they are not guaranteed.”

(2)  A statement to be signed and dated by the insurance producer or other authorized representative of the insurer reading as follows: “I certify that this illustration has been presented to the applicant and that I have explained that any non-guaranteed elements illustrated are subject to change. I have made no statements that are inconsistent with the illustration.”

(e) Tabular detail.

(1)  A basic illustration shall include the following for at least each policy year from one to ten (10) and for every fifth policy year thereafter ending at age one hundred (100), policy maturity or final expiration; and except for term insurance beyond the 20th year, for any year in which the premium outlay and contract premium, if applicable, is to change:

(i)  The premium outlay and mode the applicant plans to pay and the contract premium, as applicable;

(ii)  The corresponding guaranteed death benefit, as provided in the policy; and

(iii)  The corresponding guaranteed value available upon surrender, as provided in the policy.

(2)  For a policy that provides for a contract premium, the guaranteed death benefit and value available upon surrender shall correspond to the contract premium.

(3)  Non-guaranteed elements may be shown if described in the contract. In the case of an illustration for a policy on which the insurer intends to credit terminal dividends, they may be shown if the insurer’s current practice is to pay terminal dividends. If any non-guaranteed elements are shown they must be shown at the same durations as the corresponding guaranteed elements, if any. If no guaranteed benefit or value is available at any duration for which a non-guaranteed benefit or value is shown, a zero shall be displayed in the guaranteed column.

History of Section.
P.L. 1998, ch. 56, § 1.