Modified Endowment Contracts (MECs)

A Modified Endowment Contract (MEC) is a life insurance policy that has been funded too quickly relative to its death benefit. MECs lose some of the favorable tax treatment of regular life insurance.

The 7-Pay Test

The 7-pay test determines whether a life insurance policy becomes a MEC. A policy becomes a MEC if:

The cumulative premiums paid at any point during the first 7 years exceed the total of the level annual premiums that would have been required to pay up the policy in 7 years.

How the 7-Pay Test Works

The insurance company calculates the 7-pay premium - the level annual premium needed to fully pay up the policy in exactly 7 years using guaranteed assumptions.

Year7-Pay Premium Limit (Cumulative)Actual Premiums PaidMEC Status
1$10,000$8,000Not MEC
2$20,000$18,000Not MEC
3$30,000$35,000BECOMES MEC

Key Point: Once a policy becomes a MEC, it remains a MEC forever. The MEC status cannot be reversed.

When the 7-Pay Test Restarts

The 7-pay test restarts (new 7-year period begins) when there is a material change to the policy:

  • Increase in death benefit (except due to corridor requirements)
  • Exchange or conversion to a new policy
  • Addition of certain riders that increase benefits

A reduction in death benefit does NOT trigger a new 7-pay test, but it may cause the policy to retroactively become a MEC.

LIFO Taxation of MEC Distributions

The most significant difference between MECs and non-MECs is the taxation of distributions:

Distribution TypeNon-MEC TreatmentMEC Treatment
WithdrawalsFIFO (basis first)LIFO (gain first)
Policy loansNot taxableTaxable as distribution
Partial surrendersFIFOLIFO
Pledging as collateralNot taxableTaxable as distribution

LIFO (Last-In, First-Out) means the gain is distributed first, making every dollar withdrawn taxable until all gains are exhausted.

Example: MEC vs. Non-MEC Withdrawal

Policy Details:

  • Cash value: $100,000
  • Premiums paid (basis): $60,000
  • Gain: $40,000
  • Withdrawal: $25,000
Non-MECMEC
Taxable amount$0$25,000
Tax treatmentBasis comes out firstGain comes out first

10% Penalty Tax

MECs are subject to a 10% additional tax on the taxable portion of distributions taken before age 59½.

Exceptions to the 10% Penalty:

  1. Distributions after reaching age 59½
  2. Distributions due to death
  3. Distributions due to disability
  4. Substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP) over life expectancy

Exam Tip: The 10% penalty applies only to the TAXABLE portion of the distribution, not the entire amount.

Penalty Calculation Example

  • MEC distribution: $30,000
  • Taxable portion (gain): $20,000
  • Taxpayer age: 45

Tax consequences:

  • Ordinary income tax on $20,000
  • 10% penalty on $20,000 = $2,000

Death Benefit Treatment

Good News for MEC Policyowners:

Despite the unfavorable taxation of living distributions, MEC death benefits retain the same tax treatment as non-MECs:

  • Death benefits are still income tax-free to beneficiaries
  • Transfer for value rules still apply
  • Estate tax treatment is unchanged

This is why MECs can still be appropriate for clients who:

  • Want tax-free death benefits
  • Don't need to access cash value during lifetime
  • Can leave money untouched until death

Avoiding MEC Status

Strategies to avoid creating a MEC:

  1. Spread premiums over 7+ years - Don't overfund early
  2. Increase death benefit - Higher death benefit = higher 7-pay limit
  3. Use higher-cost policy types - Traditional whole life has higher limits than universal life
  4. Monitor 7-pay limit - Know your policy's limit before paying premiums

When MECs May Be Appropriate

Appropriate for MECNOT Appropriate for MEC
Estate planningNeed for policy loans
Legacy planningRetirement income supplement
Wealth transfer"Bank on yourself" strategies
Premium financingLiving benefits focus
Single premium purchasesCash value access planned
Test Your Knowledge

Which of the following is TRUE about Modified Endowment Contracts (MECs)?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

A 50-year-old policyowner takes a $40,000 withdrawal from a MEC with $60,000 in cash value and $35,000 in basis. What are the tax consequences?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Which of the following events would cause the 7-pay test to restart?

A
B
C
D