A loan against your LIC policy lets you borrow money from the insurer using your own policy as security, but only if the policy has built up a surrender value after you have paid premiums for a few years. The insurer lends you a part of that surrender value and charges interest until you repay.
This guide covers who can get such a loan, how much you can borrow, how to apply, how repayment works, and how it compares with a personal loan. The same idea applies to most insurers, but the exact numbers here are from LIC.
The most important rule is simple. You can only take a loan if your policy has a surrender value. A surrender value is the cash value your policy builds up once you have paid premiums for a minimum period.
LIC's policy guidelines state: “Surrender value is payable only after three full years premiums are paid to LIC.” So you usually need to have paid at least three full years of premiums before a loan is possible.
This means traditional savings policies are the ones that qualify, such as endowment plans, money-back plans, and whole-life plans. LIC says: “Many of our plans are of endowment type and you would be allowed to raise a loan against your policy should you require funds.”
What does not qualify:
If you are unsure, the quickest check is to ask whether your policy has a surrender value yet.
The loan is a percentage of the surrender value, not of the sum assured or the premiums you have paid. For LIC, the official limit is clear.
LIC states: “The maximum loan amount available under the policy is 90% of the Surrender Value of the policy (85% in case of paid up policies) including cash value of bonus.”
So:
The exact percentage and the rupee amount depend on your specific policy and insurer, so always confirm the figure for your own policy before you plan around it.
When you take the loan, the policy is assigned to the insurer as security. LIC's requirement reads: “Policy to be assigned absolutely in favour of the Corporation.”
Assignment means the title of the policy moves from your name to the insurer for the duration of the loan. LIC explains: “In case you are raising a loan against your policy from LIC or any other financial institution, your policy would have to be assigned to LIC or the financial institution.”
Once you repay fully, the policy is given back to you. LIC notes: “The policy would be reassigned to you on the repayment of the loan. A fresh nomination should be done after reassignment of the policy.” So after reassignment you may need to file a fresh nomination so the right person receives the claim.
Interest is charged on the loan, and for LIC it is usually paid half-yearly. LIC states: “The rate of interest charged on policy loan is declared by the Corporation every year and they are plan specific. Interest on loan is payable half yearly.”
Rates change from year to year and differ by plan, so do not rely on any fixed number you read online. Ask the insurer for the current rate on your plan.
You have flexible repayment. LIC says: “You repay the loan with interest or continue paying the interest and allow the loan to be deducted at the time of the claim payments.”
So you can:
If the policy matures or a death claim arises while the loan is open, any outstanding loan plus interest is deducted from the payout. The family or you receive the balance after that deduction.
For LIC you have two common routes.
For other insurers the steps are similar. Contact your insurer or agent and ask for their policy loan form.
Reasons it can be attractive:
Things to watch:
A loan against your policy suits short-term needs where you intend to repay. It is not a substitute for a large personal loan.
No. A pure term plan has no surrender value, so there is nothing to lend against. Loans are available on savings type plans such as endowment, money-back, and whole-life policies that have built up a surrender value.
LIC allows up to 90 percent of the surrender value on an in-force policy and up to 85 percent on a paid-up policy, including the cash value of bonus. The exact amount depends on your policy, so confirm it with LIC for your case.
Your policy must first have a surrender value. LIC says surrender value is payable only after three full years of premiums are paid, so you usually need at least three full years of paid premiums before a loan is possible.
Any outstanding loan plus interest is deducted from the maturity amount or the death claim. Your nominee or you receive the balance after that deduction.
If the loan plus unpaid interest keeps growing and crosses the surrender value, the policy can be closed to recover the dues, which can end your cover. Keep paying at least the interest to avoid this.
For a wider toolkit on using your right to information to get clear answers from public bodies, see The RTI Playbook.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak