You want clear answers about how a MetLife cash-value-life-insurance-metlife plan works so you can protect loved ones today and build a legacy for tomorrow.
This FAQ-style guide gives practical explanations you can act on right away. You will learn what cash value is, how it grows, and how it pairs with the death benefit to provide lifelong protection and flexible access.
We will show where to find key figures on your annual statement, including cash value and cash surrender value, so you know what you own. You will also get plain-English details on policy loans, interest, and how borrowing affects long-term results results results for your coverage.
The guide explains surrender value versus death benefit and why carrying a loan balance can lower what beneficiaries receive. You will find straightforward tax notes, reinstatement steps if a policy lapses, and a simple checklist to review your plan.
Key Takeaways
- Understand how cash value grows and ties to the death benefit.
- Learn where to read cash and surrender values on statements.
- Know how policy loans and interest affect long-term results results.
- See tax basics: cost basis, tax-free withdrawals, and taxable loan outcomes.
- Find steps to request reinstatement and keep coverage active.
- Use the final checklist to review dates, values, and next actions.
What is a MetLife cash value life insurance policy and how can it help you build a legacy?
Think of this plan as two linked pieces: a guaranteed payout for your loved ones and a savings component that can grow while you live.
You own a life insurance policy with two core components: a reliable death benefit for beneficiaries and a cash value account that can fund loans or withdrawals for college, retirement gaps, or emergencies.
The policy value is more than one number. Cash value, surrender value, and the paid death benefit interact. Your choices—how much you fund, whether you borrow, or if you withdraw—change those figures over time.
Generally speaking, keeping premiums current and using cash thoughtfully helps preserve the value death benefit you intend to leave.
- Use cash value for short-term needs without surrendering protection.
- Remember surrender value reflects fees and any outstanding loans.
- Coordinate beneficiaries and trusts to maximize legacy outcomes.
Understanding policy values today: cash value, cash surrender value, loans, and the death benefit
Your annual statement is the clearest snapshot of current policy values. Open the summary to find cash value, cash surrender value, and the paid death benefit at a glance.
Where to find your current policy values and cash surrender value in your annual statement
Look for a summary section near the front of the annual statement. It lists current policy values and shows how the cash surrender value was calculated.
Review annual statement line items that show premiums, credits, and charges so you see what changed since the last policy anniversary date.
How policy loans work: added loan principal, loan interest, and unpaid interest
When you take a policy loan, you create loan principal that reduces the policy cash available. The statement shows the outstanding loan principal and the loan interest rate.
If loan interest is not paid, unpaid interest may be capitalized as added loan principal. That increases future loan interest and can compound quickly.
Surrender value vs. death benefit: how the value death benefit may be affected by outstanding loans
Surrender value reflects charges and any policy cash surrender loans. Large loans reduce surrender value and can lower the net amount paid to beneficiaries.
Tip: Mark your policy anniversary date on your calendar to review the annual statement, confirm beneficiaries, and check loan illustrations before borrowing.
- Request interim values if you need a current snapshot between annual statements.
- Compare surrender value and death benefit before taking withdrawals or loans.
- Watch how added loan principal and loan interest affect long-term policy value.
Taxes and your cash value: cost basis, withdrawals, and when loan plus interest can be taxable
Taxes change how much of your policy’s savings you can use tax-free, so start by knowing your cost basis.
Cost basis explained: Your cost basis equals the total premiums you paid minus prior nontaxable distributions. Withdrawals up to that number are generally not taxable, and policy loans are not taxed when you receive them.
When a taxable gain can occur
Generally speaking, a taxable gain may arise if the policy matures, is surrendered, or is terminated for reasons other than a death benefit payment.
At that time, the outstanding amount loaned against the policy — including any unpaid interest — is treated as if you received it. If the loan plus interest exceeds your cost basis, that excess is taxable.
IRS reporting and what to expect
MetLife must report amounts that exceed your cost basis under IRS rules. You’ll receive forms showing taxable gain when it occurs.
- Know your cost basis to plan tax-free withdrawals.
- Monitor the amount loan outstanding and unpaid interest so you avoid unintended tax.
- Factor taxes into choices about surrender value versus loans or withdrawals.
Tip: Pay loan interest from outside the policy when possible to prevent unpaid interest from compounding the balance and creating taxable results results later.
If your policy lapses: reinstatement steps, payments due, and keeping your coverage
If your policy lapses, you may be able to restore coverage by following a clear reinstatement process laid out in your notice.

Reinstatement process: letter, application, amount due, and paying the next two monthly charges
You will receive a letter if you are eligible to reinstate. That letter states the amount needed to reinstate and includes an application.
Return the completed application with payment by the deadline. The amount required will cover the next two monthly charges once payment is received.
Tip: If your packet is missing, please contact us to confirm eligibility and the amount due.
After approval: planned premium payments, possible premium increase, or reducing coverage
If your reinstatement is approved, resume your planned premium payments. You may need to increase premiums or reduce the amount of life insurance to keep coverage in force.
If the application is incomplete or not approved, your payment will be refunded. Ask how outstanding loans or unpaid charges were handled during the lapse and how reinstatement will affect surrender value and cash surrender value.
- Set reminders or automatic payments to avoid future lapses.
- Request an updated in-force illustration to compare premium and cash surrender scenarios.
- If you misplaced your notice, please contact us or click customer support to get the number and latest correspondence details.
Conclusion
A clear annual review and cautious borrowing let you use policy cash without jeopardizing long-term results. Keep your routine simple: check the annual statement, confirm the cash value and cash surrender value, and note any outstanding loan principal.
Act consistently. Maintain funding for your life insurance policy, review updated in‑force illustrations yearly, and watch loan interest so it does not erode the death benefit.
Protect the legacy. Coordinate beneficiaries and estate plans, pay loan interest from outside when possible, and revisit coverage after major life events. When in doubt, seek financial or tax advice to align your policy value with family goals.