Guaranteed Renewable Policy
A guaranteed renewable policy is a contract feature that obligates an insurer to continue coverage as long as the policyholder pays the required premiums. Coverage cannot be canceled for individual reasons like changes in health or claims history, but the insurer may raise premiums under the policy’s terms.
Key takeaways
- Guaranteed renewal ensures continued coverage while premiums are paid.
- Premiums can increase—even after a claim—according to the policy terms.
- A non-cancellable policy is stronger: it guarantees both continued coverage and locked-in premiums for a specified period.
- Three common renewal provisions are: non-cancellable (often combined with guaranteed renewable), guaranteed renewable, and conditionally renewable.
Types of renewal provisions
Non-cancellable (often combined with guaranteed renewable)
- Guarantees the insurer will renew the policy and cannot raise premiums or change benefits for the period specified in the contract (commonly to age 65 or another stated age).
- Preferred by consumers because it locks both coverage and premium amounts.
- Frequently used in disability insurance so benefits and cost remain fixed even if circumstances change.
- Typically more expensive than other renewal options.
Guaranteed renewable
- Guarantees the insurer will continue coverage while premiums are paid, but the insurer may raise premiums or alter premium schedules (usually for an entire class of policyholders or per the contract).
- Provides security of continued coverage but not price stability.
- Generally less expensive than non-cancellable policies.
Conditionally renewable
- Offers the least protection: the insurer can change conditions or choose not to renew under contract-specified circumstances.
- No guarantee that the same benefits or terms will be available at renewal.
How to evaluate and choose
- Prefer non-cancellable policies when you need price certainty and long-term protection (for example, disability coverage).
- Consider guaranteed renewable policies if affordability is more important than locked-in premiums.
- Read the renewal and premium-change provisions carefully to understand when and how premiums may be increased.
- Check any age limits or specified periods for guaranteed protections.
Bottom line
Guaranteed renewable provisions protect ongoing access to insurance as long as premiums are paid, but they do not necessarily protect against premium increases. For the strongest protection—both continued coverage and fixed premiums—look for non-cancellable policy terms.