LLQP Life Insurance Cheat Sheet — High-Yield Rules, Checklists, and Pitfalls
December 23, 2025
Comprehensive LLQP Life Insurance cheat sheet covering fact-find and needs analysis, product selection, underwriting workflow, servicing mindset, common traps, and fast review tables.
test ownership, beneficiary, underwriting, and implementation before locking the answer
LLQP Life Insurance in one picture (process > trivia)
flowchart TD
A["Client story"] --> B["Fact-find (what matters?)"]
B --> C["Needs analysis (what problem?)"]
C --> D["Product fit (what structure?)"]
D --> E["Application + underwriting (what evidence?)"]
E --> F["Recommendation + delivery (what’s documented?)"]
F --> G["Service + review (what changes?)"]
Exam reflex (works like a cheat code):
Goal: what outcome is the client trying to achieve?
Constraint: what’s the tightest limit (budget, time horizon, underwriting reality, legal/estate context)?
Next step: what is missing (facts, documentation, suitability, signatures/consents)?
Assess Needs and Situation (35%)
Fact-find checklist (what you want in every stem)
Bucket
What you need to know
Classic exam cue
People
ages, dependents, marital status, blended family
beneficiary/ownership complications
Income
stability, replacement need, survivor resources
“single income family”, “kids in school”
Expenses
baseline living costs, future costs
“tight budget”, “new mortgage”
Debts
mortgage, loans, guarantees
“co‑signed”, “business loan”
Assets
liquid vs illiquid, emergency fund
“real estate rich, cash poor”
Existing coverage
group life, individual policies, convertibility
“employer plan”, “coverage ends if…”
Health/lifestyle
smoker status, conditions, avocations, travel
underwriting risk and exclusions
Occupation
hazardous duties, self-employed
rating / insurability / income volatility
Business context
key person, buy‑sell intent
ownership + beneficiary often corporate
Legal/estate
who should receive proceeds, minors, creditor concerns
“second marriage”, “wants money held for kids”
Best‑answer elimination rule: if options jump to a product before the stem supports a clear need, the safer answer is often gathering missing facts or clarifying objectives.
Quick stem scan (five buckets)
Income replacement: dependents, duration of dependency, survivor income sources.
Debt & obligations: mortgage, loans, business debt, guarantees.
Final expenses: funeral, legal/estate costs, immediate liquidity.
Tax at death (high level): liquidity needs, estate equalization, charitable intent.
Existing resources: savings, existing policies, group coverage, pensions/benefits (CPP/QPP).
Exam habit: if a key fact is missing (age, dependents, debts, income stability), the “best” answer often focuses on gathering information before recommending.
Needs analysis: a practical “coverage target” formula (concept)
Underwriting answers “is the risk acceptable, and at what price?” Common drivers:
health history (including family history), build, blood pressure, etc. (concept)
smoker status
hazardous avocations/occupation
amount requested vs income/net worth (anti‑selection concern)
Exam cue: if underwriting is uncertain and the need is temporary, a defensible answer often emphasizes affordability + insurability management (e.g., right‑sizing face amount, choosing a structure that can be reviewed later).
Analyze Products That Meet the Need (30%)
Term vs permanent: fast decision table
Need type
Time horizon
Often‑best fit
Why
Mortgage / kids / income replacement
temporary
Term
lowest cost per dollar; matches time‑limited risk
Estate liquidity / taxes at death
lifelong
Permanent
coverage persists; avoids “outliving the term”
Client unsure; wants future flexibility
temporary → maybe longer
Convertible term
locks in insurability; can convert without new medical (policy-specific)
Business succession (buy‑sell)
longer/lifelong
Permanent or structured term
depends on intent, timeline, and funding design
Term insurance: what matters (high yield)
Level term: premiums usually level for the term period.
Renewable term: can extend coverage at the end of the term (typically at higher cost as age increases).
Convertible term: ability to convert to permanent coverage without new evidence of insurability (policy-specific).
Term length selection: match the term to the need horizon (e.g., until retirement, until mortgage maturity, until children are independent).
Trap: choosing permanent when the stem screams “budget constrained + temporary need”.
Permanent insurance: whole life vs universal life (high level)
may require back premiums + evidence of insurability (policy-specific)
set expectations; gather evidence; document changes in health
Conditional receipt / temporary insurance
coverage may apply while underwriting is pending (terms vary)
don’t assume coverage exists; confirm conditions and documentation
Common exam traps
Recommending permanent coverage when the need is clearly temporary and budget-sensitive.
Recommending term coverage when the real problem is lifelong estate liquidity.
Ignoring group coverage, existing policies, or convertibility.
Mixing up policyowner control with beneficiary rights.
Treating underwriting or replacement issues as administrative details instead of suitability issues.
Pressure checklist
What exact financial problem is the client trying to solve?
Is the need temporary, lifelong, or business-related?
What ownership, beneficiary, or underwriting fact could change the answer?
What implementation or service issue could still make the recommendation weak?
Better use of this page
use this page after you already understand the client-fit logic from the guide home
if you keep missing planning-problem questions, go back to the Study Plan and rebuild your fact-find sequence
if you keep missing format or module-fit questions, use the FAQ
Glossary (high-yield)
Accidental death benefit (ADB) rider: provides an additional benefit if death is accidental (rider-specific limits apply).
Absolute assignment: transfer of policy ownership rights to another party.
Adverse selection: higher-risk individuals are more likely to buy or increase insurance, affecting pricing/underwriting.
Attending physician statement (APS): medical report requested by an insurer from a doctor (with consent).
Beneficiary: person/entity designated to receive policy proceeds on the insured’s death.
Business continuation insurance (concept): insurance used to fund business obligations on death (e.g., buy‑sell, key person).
Cash surrender value (CSV): amount available if a permanent policy is surrendered (policy-specific; may include charges).
Collateral assignment: assignment where a lender’s interest is limited to the debt amount secured by the policy.
Conditional receipt / temporary insurance (concept): interim coverage that may apply while underwriting is completed (terms vary).
Contestability period (concept): time during which misrepresentation can more easily affect claim decisions (often 2 years; policy-specific).
Conversion privilege: ability to convert term insurance to permanent coverage without new medical evidence (policy-specific).
Cost of insurance (COI): charge for pure insurance protection (commonly referenced in universal life structures).
Creditor protection (concept): certain designations can offer protection against creditors in some circumstances/jurisdictions.
Death benefit: amount paid on the insured’s death per the policy contract (subject to terms).
Dividend (participating policy): distribution based on insurer experience; not guaranteed.
Dividend options: ways dividends can be used (cash, reduce premium, accumulate with interest, paid‑up additions, etc.; policy-specific).
Evidence of insurability (EOI): proof (often medical/financial) used by insurers to assess underwriting risk.
Exclusion: policy provision that removes coverage for specified risks/events (policy-specific).
Face amount: stated amount of insurance coverage (commonly the base death benefit before adjustments).
Grace period: period after premium due date during which coverage may remain in force (policy-specific).
Guaranteed insurability option (GIO): rider allowing purchase of additional coverage at set times/events without new medical evidence (rider-specific).
Group life insurance: life coverage provided through an employer/association plan.
Human life value approach (concept): estimates coverage based on the economic value of the insured’s future earnings.
Illustration: document showing how a policy may perform under assumptions (especially for cash value policies); assumptions may not be guaranteed.
Incontestability clause (concept): contractual limit on contesting a policy after a period, except for specific issues (policy-specific).
Insurable interest: a recognized relationship where the policyowner would suffer loss on the insured’s death; typically required when the policy is issued (concept).
Irrevocable beneficiary: beneficiary designation that generally cannot be changed without consent (jurisdiction/policy rules apply).
Joint first‑to‑die: joint policy that pays on the first death among insured lives.
Joint last‑to‑die: joint policy that pays on the last death among insured lives.
Key person insurance (concept): coverage to protect a business from financial loss if a key individual dies.
Lapse: termination of coverage due to non‑payment or insufficient policy values (policy-specific).
Level premium: premium designed to remain the same for a period (e.g., term period; policy-specific).
Material misrepresentation: incorrect/omitted information that would influence underwriting; can affect claims (concept).
Medical underwriting: risk assessment based on medical and lifestyle evidence (concept).
Modal premium: premium paid monthly/quarterly/etc.; total annual cost may differ from annual pay due to modal factors (concept).
Moral hazard: change in behaviour when protected by insurance (concept).
Non‑participating policy: policy that does not pay dividends.
Owner (policyowner): the person/entity that owns and controls the policy.
Paid‑up additions (PUA): dividend option that uses dividends to purchase additional permanent insurance (policy-specific).
Participating (par) policy: a policy eligible to receive dividends based on insurer experience; dividends are not guaranteed.
Payor: the person/entity paying premiums when different from the owner.
Policy loan: loan taken against a policy’s cash value (policy-specific); affects values and benefits.
Premium: amount paid to keep coverage in force per contract terms.
Primary beneficiary: first in line to receive proceeds.
Proof of age: evidence to confirm insured’s age; misstatement can adjust benefits/premiums (policy-specific).
Rating (substandard): underwriting outcome where premium is increased or benefits modified due to higher risk (concept).
Renewable term: term coverage that can be renewed without new evidence of insurability (typically at higher cost as age increases; policy-specific).
Revocable beneficiary: beneficiary designation that can be changed by the policyowner (subject to policy/jurisdiction rules).
Rider: optional benefit added to a base policy (policy-specific).
Segregated fund (concept): investment/insurance product typically covered in a different LLQP module (Seg Funds & Annuities).