A life insurance 1035 exchange allows you to swap one insurance policy for another without triggering an immediate tax event on the gains. While this sounds good on paper, these exchanges are a common source of broker misconduct and can lead to significant investor harm when handled improperly.
What Is A Life Insurance 1035 Exchange?
A life insurance 1035 exchange is a provision under Section 1035 of the IRS tax code that permits the tax-free transfer of funds from one insurance product to another. This means you can move the cash value from an old policy into a new one, deferring taxes on the growth you’ve accumulated.
The exchange must be a direct, trustee-to-trustee transfer. You can't simply cash out your old policy and buy a new one; the money must move directly between the insurance companies. This process is intended to give policyholders the flexibility to adapt their coverage as their financial needs change over time.
However, this powerful tool is frequently abused by financial advisors and insurance brokers looking to generate new commissions. An unsuitable exchange can lock an investor into a costly new product with high fees, long surrender periods, and features they don't need, all while the broker walks away with a hefty payday.
How A 1035 Exchange Is Supposed To Work
The rules for 1035 exchanges have been around for decades, but their use has surged as insurance products have become more complex. The core principle is that a policyholder shouldn’t be penalized with a large tax bill for wanting to switch to a more suitable product.
For a 1035 exchange to be valid and tax-free, it must follow strict "like-for-like" rules. Generally, you can exchange a life insurance policy for another life insurance policy, an endowment policy, or an annuity. However, you cannot exchange an annuity for a life insurance policy on a tax-free basis.
Understanding the difference between policies is crucial. Before considering any exchange, it is important to know the basics of products like Term vs Whole Life Insurance. This knowledge helps clarify why certain policies, especially those that build cash value, are often targeted for these exchanges.
A proper exchange should accomplish a clear goal for the policyholder, such as:
- Lowering expensive premiums on an outdated policy.
- Accessing better features, such as a long-term care rider.
- Moving to a policy with more favorable investment options.
- Consolidating multiple policies for easier management.
A 1035 exchange is intended to provide flexibility. It ensures policyholders aren't "locked in" to an outdated or unsuitable product simply to avoid a large tax consequence on the policy's gains.
In 2026, over 1.2 million 1035 exchanges took place, with more than $25 billion in policy values being transferred. While many of these were legitimate, a significant number were likely driven by broker commissions rather than the client's best interest.
This is especially true for complex products like variable universal life insurance, which are often sold through unsuitable exchanges. To better understand the risks, you can learn more about the pros and cons of variable universal life insurance.
Permissible vs. Prohibited 1035 Exchanges
The IRS has strict guidelines on which types of exchanges are allowed to maintain their tax-deferred status. Swapping policies in a way that violates these rules can result in an unexpected and significant tax bill.
The table below outlines the most common like-kind exchanges that are either permitted or prohibited under Section 1035.
| Original Policy | New Policy | Is Exchange Tax-Free? |
|---|---|---|
| Life Insurance | Life Insurance | Yes |
| Life Insurance | Annuity | Yes |
| Life Insurance | Endowment Policy | Yes |
| Annuity | Annuity | Yes |
| Annuity | Life Insurance | No (This is a taxable event) |
| Endowment Policy | Endowment Policy | Yes |
| Endowment Policy | Annuity | Yes |
As the table shows, the most critical rule to remember is that you cannot exchange an annuity contract for a life insurance policy without triggering taxes. This is because life insurance death benefits are generally tax-free, and the IRS prohibits using an annuity’s tax-deferred growth to fund such a product.
If you were advised to make a prohibited exchange or believe you were the victim of an unsuitable one, you may be able to recover your losses.
If you would like a free consultation to discuss the investment loss recovery process in more detail, call Kons Law Firm at (860) 920-5181 for a FREE, NO OBLIGATION consultation.
Understanding the Rules of a 1035 Exchange
For a life insurance 1035 exchange to receive its tax-free status, it must follow strict IRS rules. If your broker or advisor gets it wrong, you could be left with an unexpected and significant tax bill on your policy's gains. The entire process rests on a few critical rules that, when broken, can cause serious financial harm to the investor.
The single most important rule is that you, the policy owner, can never have “constructive receipt” of the funds. This is a legal term meaning you cannot touch, control, or possess the money at any point during the exchange.
The money must move directly from your old insurance company to the new one. This is non-negotiable.
If the original insurer sends a check made out to you—even if you immediately endorse it to the new company—the tax-free exchange is blown. The IRS will view this as a full surrender of the old policy, and all the gains you've accumulated over the years become taxable as ordinary income.
The "Like-Kind" Exchange Requirement
Another core principle is the "like-kind" requirement. This term often causes confusion. It doesn't mean the policies must be identical, but that the exchange must happen between specific, IRS-approved product categories.
- Life Insurance to Life Insurance: This is the most common scenario, where you swap an old life insurance policy for a new one.
- Life Insurance to a Non-Qualified Annuity: You are also allowed to move funds from a life insurance policy into an annuity.
- Annuity to Annuity: Exchanging one annuity contract for another is also a permitted like-kind exchange.
There is, however, a critical red line. You cannot exchange an annuity for a life insurance policy on a tax-free basis. The IRS prohibits this because it sees it as moving from a product with fewer tax advantages (an annuity) to one with more (life insurance, which has a tax-free death benefit).
Understanding the general life insurance tax rules can help put these specific requirements into context. It helps clarify why the IRS is so particular about how these exchanges are structured.
Maintaining Policy Ownership and Insured Status
For a 1035 exchange to be valid, the owner and the insured person must stay exactly the same. The owner and insured on the new policy must be identical to the owner and insured on the policy being replaced.
For instance, if a policy is owned by John Smith and insures the life of his wife, Jane Smith, it can only be exchanged for a new policy that is also owned by John Smith and insures Jane Smith. You cannot use a 1035 exchange as a vehicle to change who owns the policy or who is insured. Any attempt to do so will disqualify the exchange and trigger a taxable event.
These ownership rules are a key detail that regulators examine. As you consider your options, it's also worth being aware of the broader rules governing these transactions. For more on that, you can read our discussion on FINRA Rule 2330, which details the suitability requirements for variable annuity recommendations.
Handling Policy Loans
What happens if your old life insurance policy has an outstanding loan? This is a common situation that adds complexity and is a frequent source of investor harm from bad advice.
If you exchange a policy with a loan and that loan balance is not carried over to the new policy, the amount of the forgiven loan may be treated as a "boot" by the IRS. This "boot" can be taxable.
For example, say your policy has a $100,000 cash value and an outstanding $20,000 loan. Only $80,000 in cash value is actually transferred to the new policy. That $20,000 loan that was essentially paid off during the transaction could now be considered income to you, creating a tax liability where you expected none. This is a classic pitfall where an unsuitable recommendation can lead to serious, negative tax consequences for an investor.
When Does a 1035 Exchange Make Sense?
A life insurance 1035 exchange can be a legitimate financial strategy, but only when it serves a clear purpose and offers a measurable improvement to your financial position. A suitable exchange is not about an advisor selling a new product; it’s about addressing a specific, documented need or a significant change in your life circumstances. The key is that the benefits must demonstrably outweigh any new costs, fees, or surrender charges.
These exchanges often become appropriate when an investor’s needs have fundamentally changed since the original policy was purchased. An insurance product that was a good fit years ago can become outdated or inefficient as your financial life evolves.
Securing Better Terms or Lower Premiums
One of the most common reasons to consider a 1035 exchange is to move into a policy with superior features. Insurance companies regularly introduce new products that may offer lower premiums for the same death benefit, particularly if your health has remained stable or improved.
For example, an investor may hold an older whole life policy with high internal costs that are dragging down cash value growth. A financial advisor might identify a newer policy providing the same death benefit but with significantly lower fees. In this case, executing a tax-free exchange allows the policyholder to move their accumulated cash value to a more efficient contract without triggering a taxable event.
The primary goal must be to enhance the policy's performance. A suitable exchange should result in tangible benefits, such as reduced costs, stronger guarantees, or better growth potential—not just a new commission for the broker.
An exchange may also be appropriate if a policy is simply underperforming. A variable universal life policy whose sub-accounts have performed poorly could be exchanged for a fixed-rate or indexed policy that offers more stability and predictable growth, better aligning with a client's conservative retirement goals.
Funding Long-Term Care Needs
A critical modern use of a life insurance 1035 exchange is to prepare for future long-term care (LTC) expenses. Many older life insurance policies with substantial cash value may no longer be needed for their original purpose—for instance, a mortgage has been paid off or children are now financially independent.
Instead of surrendering the policy and paying taxes on the gains, you can exchange it for a hybrid policy that combines a death benefit with an LTC rider. This move repositions an existing asset to protect retirement savings from the potentially catastrophic costs of long-term care.
This strategy can provide significant value. For example, a 65-year-old woman with a life insurance policy holding $170,000 in cash value could use a 1035 exchange to acquire a modern linked-benefit product. This single transaction could secure her up to $535,000 in potential tax-free long-term care benefits. You can find more information on how these exchanges are structured by reviewing resources on 1035 exchanges for long-term care.
Real-World Examples of Suitable Exchanges
Seeing how these exchanges should work in practice helps illustrate what a client-first recommendation looks like. These scenarios stand in stark contrast to the broker misconduct we will discuss later.
- The Retiree Couple: A couple in their late 60s owned a $500,000 joint life insurance policy purchased 25 years ago. Their home was paid off and their children were self-sufficient, so their primary concern shifted to the risk of one of them needing expensive nursing home care. Their advisor recommended a 1035 exchange of their policy into a hybrid LTC policy. This turned their existing cash value into a benefit pool that could provide over $7,000 per month for long-term care if needed.
- The Mid-Career Professional: A 50-year-old executive held a universal life policy from the 1990s with high fees and a low fixed interest rate, causing his cash value to stagnate. After a review, his advisor proposed a 1035 exchange into a newer indexed universal life policy with lower costs and the potential for higher interest crediting tied to market performance. This move improved the policy's growth potential without tax consequences.
In both of these examples, the exchange addressed a well-defined need and provided a clear, documented financial advantage for the client.
Weighing the Real Costs and Hidden Risks
While a life insurance 1035 exchange is often pitched as a "tax-free" upgrade, this benefit can be wiped out by hidden costs and serious risks buried in the new policy. You have to scrutinize any exchange recommendation, as the real costs frequently outweigh the advertised perks—especially when a broker’s commission is the real reason for the switch.
A swap that looks good on paper can quickly become a financial trap if you don't look beyond the sales pitch. The true cost isn't just about the premium; it's the new fees, lost benefits, and restrictive terms that can leave you in a much worse financial position.
The New Surrender Charge Period
One of the biggest and most immediate risks of a 1035 exchange is the new surrender charge period. When you move into a new policy, the clock resets on a penalty period, often lasting 7 to 15 years, where you can’t access your full cash value without paying a massive fee.
This effectively re-locks your money, often just as you were about to be free from your old policy's surrender period. An advisor who pressures you into an exchange without clearly explaining the full length and cost of a new surrender charge is likely not acting in your best interest.
This is an especially high risk for seniors who may need access to their money for healthcare or other unexpected costs. Being locked into another long-term surrender schedule can be a devastating financial blow.
Hidden Fees and Advisor Commissions
A new insurance policy always comes with a fresh set of fees. These can include administrative charges, mortality and expense (M&E) fees, and policy loan interest rates that are often higher than your old contract. These costs directly chip away at your cash value, erasing any performance gains the new policy promised.
Even more concerning, a new policy means a new, and often substantial, commission for the advisor. These commissions can represent a huge percentage of your first year's premium or the policy's total value. You must ask: is this exchange really better for me, or is it just generating a big payday for my broker?
A trustworthy advisor should willingly show you a side-by-side comparison of all fees, costs, and commissions between your old policy and the new one. If they hesitate or give you vague answers, it’s a major red flag.
The Hurdle of New Medical Underwriting
For many people, particularly those who are older or have had any change in their health, a new policy requires going through new medical underwriting. This process can be invasive, and the outcome is never guaranteed.
There are several ways this can go wrong:
- Higher Premiums: If your health has worsened since you bought your original policy, you could be approved but at a much higher cost. This could make the new policy significantly more expensive.
- Outright Denial: You face the real risk of being denied coverage completely. This could leave you without a new policy and unable to get your old one back if it was already surrendered.
- Unfavorable Terms: You might get approved, but with new exclusions or limitations that your original contract didn't have.
These risks show the danger of giving up a policy where your health rating was already "locked in" at a better rate. Red flags are especially high for certain products. For instance, unsuitable swaps into hybrid policies with 5-7% premiums over a universal life policy can backfire if your health declines, potentially creating serious tax problems. You can learn more about how regulators view these risks in connection to elder financial abuse by reading about long-term care and 1035 exchanges.
If you were pushed into an exchange that resulted in higher costs, restrictive terms, or was simply unsuitable for your financial needs, you may be a victim of broker misconduct.
If you would like a free consultation to discuss the investment loss recovery process, call Kons Law Firm at (860) 920-5181 for a FREE, NO OBLIGATION consultation.
Red Flags of Advisor Misconduct and Churning
While a life insurance 1035 exchange can be a legitimate financial strategy, its complexity also makes it a prime target for broker misconduct. Unscrupulous advisors often use the "tax-free" nature of the transfer to convince investors to buy unsuitable products, all for the sake of generating a commission. Knowing the warning signs of a bad deal is your best line of defense.
The most blatant form of this misconduct is churning. This is the practice of repeatedly and excessively trading policies within your account simply to generate commissions. An advisor engaged in churning isn't thinking about your financial future; they are only focused on creating transactions that result in a payday for themselves. If your advisor is suggesting another exchange just a few years after your last one, that is a massive red flag.
Unsuitable Product Recommendations
Another frequent form of misconduct is pushing you into an unsuitable investment. This happens when an advisor recommends an exchange that simply doesn't fit your age, risk tolerance, or financial goals. A classic example is convincing a conservative, risk-averse retiree to exchange their stable whole life policy for a high-risk variable annuity.
The new product might be loaded with high fees, exposed to market volatility, and have a long surrender period that locks up your money for years. Advisors push these exchanges into annuities with massive 7-10% front-end loads or 10-year surrender periods, which can destroy your policy's value. In one FINRA arbitration case from 2025, a senior investor was awarded $450,000 after being misled into a 1035 exchange from a low-cost policy to a variable annuity that cratered by 25% in its first year.
Behavioral Red Flags from Your Advisor
How your advisor presents the recommendation can tell you everything you need to know. An ethical advisor provides clear, patient, and comprehensive explanations. An advisor chasing a commission often does the exact opposite.
Be on the lookout for these warning signs:
- Pressure to Act Quickly: Phrases like "this is a limited-time offer" are designed to create false urgency and stop you from asking tough questions.
- Vague or Evasive Answers: If your advisor can't give you a straight answer about fees, commissions, or surrender charges, they are almost certainly hiding something.
- Refusal to Provide Comparisons: Any legitimate recommendation must include a detailed, side-by-side comparison of your old policy and the proposed new one.
- Downplaying Risks: If the advisor only talks about the upside and brushes off your concerns about costs or market risk, you are not getting the full story.
An honest advisor works for you; a salesperson works for a commission. Your advisor should be able to clearly articulate—with documentation—why the recommended exchange is unequivocally better for your specific situation, even after accounting for all new costs and fees.
Piercing Questions to Ask Your Advisor
To protect yourself, you have to be an active participant in this process. Before you sign any paperwork for a life insurance 1035 exchange, insist on getting clear, written answers to these critical questions:
- What is the total commission you will earn from this transaction, in dollars? Don't settle for a percentage. Ask for the exact dollar amount.
- Can you show me a side-by-side comparison of all fees, costs, and expenses for my current policy and the proposed new policy? This must include mortality costs, administrative fees, and any rider charges.
- What is the new surrender charge period, and what would it cost me to get my money out in each of those years?
- What specific financial goal of mine does this exchange help me achieve, and how is it superior to my current policy for that goal?
- If I need new medical underwriting, what happens if I am denied or my health is rated poorly?
If your advisor resists answering these questions or gives you unsatisfactory responses, it’s a clear signal to walk away. This type of behavior often points toward churning, a serious form of misconduct. To learn more about this specific type of fraud, check out our guide on the definition of churning in the insurance industry. An unsuitable 1035 exchange can cause immense financial harm, but recognizing these red flags can help you protect your assets.
If you suspect you have been harmed by an unsuitable life insurance 1035 exchange, you have rights. Taking action quickly is the first step toward holding your advisor accountable and potentially recovering your financial losses.
It’s a difficult situation when a trusted advisor’s recommendations lead to harm, but you have options.
What to Do Next
Your first priority should be to gather every piece of documentation related to your old and new insurance policies. This paper trail is the evidence that will form the foundation of your case.
Start by collecting the following:
- Policy Statements for both the old policy you surrendered and the new one you purchased.
- Illustrations shown to you by your advisor that projected the costs, fees, and returns of the new policy.
- Correspondence including all emails, letters, and notes from your conversations about the exchange.
- Application Forms for the new policy, which detail your stated financial goals and risk tolerance.
An experienced investment fraud attorney can analyze these documents for inconsistencies, misrepresentations, and clear evidence that the exchange was unsuitable for your situation.
Recovering Your Losses Through FINRA Arbitration
For most investors, the primary path to resolving disputes against brokerage firms and their advisors is FINRA arbitration. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) runs the largest dispute resolution forum for the securities industry.
This process is often more efficient than going through the traditional court system. A neutral arbitrator or a panel of arbitrators will hear your case, review the evidence, and issue a binding decision. To win your case, you must show how the advisor's recommendation was unsuitable and directly caused your financial damages.
Successfully navigating a FINRA arbitration claim requires a deep understanding of securities law. An experienced financial fraud attorney can build a strong case and fight to recover the money you lost.
If you would like a free consultation to discuss the investment loss recovery process in more detail, call Kons Law Firm at (860) 920-5181 for a FREE, NO OBLIGATION consultation.
Common Questions About 1035 Exchanges
The rules around 1035 exchanges can be dense, and it’s natural to have questions. Getting clear answers is the first step in protecting your financial future. Here are some of the most frequent inquiries we see from investors.
Can I Do a Partial 1035 Exchange?
Yes, you can execute a partial 1035 exchange. This strategy involves moving only a portion of an existing policy's cash value into a new contract, while the original policy remains in force.
A partial exchange can be a smart move to fund a specific goal, like adding a long-term care rider, without having to surrender your entire original policy. Be warned, however, that the rules are incredibly strict. If any funds are distributed to you during the transaction, it can trigger an unexpected tax bill. This maneuver requires careful planning with an advisor you can trust.
What Happens to My Cost Basis in a 1035 Exchange?
Your original cost basis—the sum of all the premiums you've paid into the policy—simply carries over to the new contract. This is the core mechanism that allows a 1035 exchange to maintain the tax-deferred status of your policy's growth.
For instance, imagine you paid $50,000 in premiums for a policy that has grown to a cash value of $80,000. In a proper 1035 exchange, your cost basis in the new policy is still $50,000. The $30,000 gain is not taxed but instead rolls into the new contract, where it can continue to grow tax-deferred. Any legitimate broker should be able to track and explain this rollover to you clearly.
How Can I Prove My 1035 Exchange Was Unsuitable?
Proving that a life insurance 1035 exchange was unsuitable requires showing that the transaction was not actually in your best financial interest at the time it was recommended by your broker. This means you need to gather specific evidence to build a strong case.
Key evidence often demonstrates one or more of the following:
- The new policy came with much higher fees or commissions without providing you any meaningful new benefit.
- You were exposed to a higher level of investment risk that did not align with your stated risk tolerance or financial goals.
- A new, lengthy surrender period and its steep penalties were not fully explained or disclosed to you.
The critical documents for your case will include the policy illustrations for both your old and new contracts, account statements, and any risk tolerance questionnaires you filled out. An experienced investment fraud attorney can use this evidence to construct a powerful case for recovering your losses through a FINRA arbitration claim.
