Weekly Premium Insurance

Weekly Premium Insurance

Weekly premium insurance is a type of financial protection where the payments that the insured makes in return for coverage are paid weekly. As incomes rose in the mid-1900s, monthly insurance policies became more popular, causing weekly premium insurance plans to decline. This type of insurance was introduced by Prudential in 1875 and was common in the late 1800s and early 1900s. At that time, insurers were unable to get insurance with monthly premium payments to catch on with consumers. In the mid-1900s, the number of weekly premium insurance policies began to decline because rising incomes made larger and less frequent premium payments more affordable for many families. Weekly premiums were a feature of industrial insurance, a type of life insurance product offered to workers employed in industrial jobs such as manufacturing. Weekly premium insurance goes back to the late 1800s, before monthly insurance plans existed.

Weekly premium insurance goes back to the late 1800s, before monthly insurance plans existed.

What Is Weekly Premium Insurance?

Weekly premium insurance is a type of financial protection where the payments that the insured makes in return for coverage are paid weekly.

This type of insurance was introduced by Prudential in 1875 and was common in the late 1800s and early 1900s. At that time, insurers were unable to get insurance with monthly premium payments to catch on with consumers. The small weekly premium payments were designed to match up with workers' pay schedules and modest incomes. Weekly premium insurance is also known as industrial life insurance.

Weekly premium insurance goes back to the late 1800s, before monthly insurance plans existed.
Weekly premium insurance was popular back then because the premium payments aligned with the wage schedules of those who were insured.
As incomes rose in the mid-1900s, monthly insurance policies became more popular, causing weekly premium insurance plans to decline.

How Weekly Premium Insurance Works

Weekly premiums were a feature of industrial insurance, a type of life insurance product offered to workers employed in industrial jobs such as manufacturing. Insurance companies collected the premium payments by sending agents to people's homes. In the mid-1900s, the number of weekly premium insurance policies began to decline because rising incomes made larger and less frequent premium payments more affordable for many families.

Insuring America

In the early days, insurance was often sold, not bought, and that suited insurance companies fine. Behind this thinking is the notion of adverse selection. It's the idea that people who seek out insurance are more likely to need or use it and therefore are prone to higher risks. So that's one reason why insurers sent out armies of salesmen to convince people that insurance was a good idea. 

The weekly policies of yesteryear were mainly whole life insurance. Weekly premiums meant the insurers collected money faster, thus lowering the cost of the policies. Workers were sold on the idea of paying a few dollars a week for, say, $2,000 worth of coverage if they died, or double that if they died in an accident, known as double indemnity. The insurance man would show up on payday, of course, either at the policy holder's home or business to collect the premium.

Building cash value was a top selling point of these policies, and still is today. At the end of 20 or 30 years worth of payments, the policy had built a cash value often equal to the premiums paid in or the policy's face value. People could borrow money against the policies as well.

Disability policies were also sold this way, long before Social Security provided disability coverage starting in 1956. Before then, there was little for the average worker to fall back on after an injury on the job made it impossible to continue working.

For people today, it's hard to imagine a society where workers received nothing from their employer beyond a paycheck and no government safety nets or retirement benefits.

Related terms:

Accidental Death and Dismemberment (AD&D) Insurance

Accidental death and dismemberment (AD&D) insurance is coverage that pays benefits upon the accidental death of an insured or for the accidental loss of a limb. read more

Adjustable Premium

An adjustable premium is an insurance premium that can change over time based on a policy that is agreed to at the outset of an insurance contract. read more

Adverse Selection

Adverse selection refers to the tendency of high-risk individuals obtaining insurance or when one negotiating party has valuable information another lacks. read more

Disability Income (DI) Insurance

Disability income (DI) insurance provides supplementary income in the event of an illness or accident that prevents the insured from working.  read more

Disability Insurance

Disability insurance is a type of insurance that will provide income in the event a worker is unable to perform their work due to disability.  read more

Insurance Coverage

Insurance coverage is the amount of risk or liability covered for an individual or entity by way of insurance services.  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

Term Life Insurance

Term life insurance is a type of life insurance that guarantees payment of a death benefit during a specified time period. read more

Tontine

A tontine is a kind of capital investment plan that began in the 17th century in Italy and peaked in the early 1900s in Europe and the U.S. read more

Voluntary Life Insurance

Voluntary life insurance, an optional benefit often offered by employers, is a plan that provides a cash benefit upon the death of the insured. read more