Defining an Incontestability Clause

Defining an Incontestability Clause

An incontestability clause is a clause in most life insurance policies that prevent the provider from voiding coverage due to a misstatement by the insured after a specific amount of time has passed. In most states, if the insured person misstates age or gender when applying for life insurance, the insurance company may not void the policy, but it can adjust death benefits to reflect the policyholder’s true age. The clock starts to run on the contestability period, the minute that a life insurance policy is purchased from a life insurance company. An incontestability clause is a clause in most life insurance policies that prevent the provider from voiding coverage due to a misstatement by the insured after a specific amount of time has passed. If an applicant forgets a single detail, the insurance company has potential grounds to deny paying life insurance benefits later on.

Most life insurance policies have an incontestability clause in them.

What is an Incontestability Clause?

An incontestability clause is a clause in most life insurance policies that prevent the provider from voiding coverage due to a misstatement by the insured after a specific amount of time has passed. A typical incontestability clause specifies that a contract will not be voidable after two or three years due to a misstatement.

Most life insurance policies have an incontestability clause in them.
An incontestability clause prevents providers from voiding coverage if there is a misstatement by the insured after some time, like two or three years, has passed.
The clock starts to run on the contestability period, the minute that a life insurance policy is purchased from a life insurance company.

How an Incontestability Clause Works

Incontestability clauses help protect insured people from firms who may try to avoid paying benefits in the event of a claim. While this provision benefits the insured, it cannot protect against outright fraud.

Lying to an insurance company with an intention to deceive can result in the cancellation of coverage or even criminal charges.

The incontestability clause in life insurance policies is one of the strongest protections for a policyholder or beneficiary. While many other legal rules for insurance favor the insurance companies, this rule is notably and strongly on the side of the consumer.

While conventional rules for contracts stipulate that if false or incomplete information was provided by one party when making the contract, then the second party has the right to void, or cancel, the agreement. The incontestability clause forbids insurance companies from doing precisely this.

Three Common Exceptions to the Incontestability Clause

How Incontestability Clauses Help Consumers

Errors are easy to make when applying for life insurance. An insurance company will often require a complete medical history before the policy is approved. If an applicant forgets a single detail, the insurance company has potential grounds to deny paying life insurance benefits later on.

Reputable insurance companies originally introduced the incontestability clause in the late 1800s to build consumer trust. By promising to pay full benefits after the policy has been in place for two years (even if there were some errors in the original application), these insurance companies tried to clean up the industry’s image. The effort was successful, and early in the 20th century, state governments began to pass laws requiring the incontestability clause.

Today, the clock immediately begins to run on the contestability period as soon as a life insurance policy is purchased. If, after two years, the insurance company hasn't found an error in the original application, benefits are assured.

Even within that period, it’s not easy for the company to rescind a policy. Under most state laws, the insurance company must file suit in court to nullify a contract. Sending a notice to the policyholder is not enough.

Related terms:

Accelerated Option

An accelerated option in an insurance contract allows the policyholder to withdraw benefits earlier than they would normally be payable. read more

Cancellation

A cancellation is a notice sent by a broker to a client, informing them than an erroneous trade has been made and is being rectified. read more

Clean Sheeting

Clean sheeting is the fraudulent act of purchasing a life insurance policy without disclosing a pre-existing terminal illness or disease. read more

Contract Holder

A contract holder is a party who receives benefits outlined in the terms of a contract. read more

Lapse

A lapse is the cessation of a privilege, right, or policy due to time or inaction. Learn how a lapse impacts contracts, insurance, and stock shares. read more

Life Insurance Guide to Policies and Companies

Life insurance is a contract in which an insurer, in exchange for a premium, guarantees payment to an insured’s beneficiaries when the insured dies. read more

Non-Contestability Clause

A non-contestability (incontesability) clause is designed to prevent feuding beneficiaries by writing them out of the will. read more