Why Fee-Only Fiduciary Advisors Often Dismiss Cash-Value Life Insurance — and Why Consensus Is Sometimes Impossible
- David H. Kinder, RFC®, ChFC®, CLU®

- Dec 28, 2025
- 6 min read

Fee-only fiduciary advisors are trained to be highly sensitive to cost. In the world of investment management, that discipline is not only appropriate—it is essential. Excessive fees compound negatively, erode long-term returns, and can materially impair client outcomes.
Viewed through that lens, cash-value life insurance often appears indefensible.
Permanent insurance policies carry mortality charges, administrative expenses, rider costs, and opportunity costs relative to market-based investments. When evaluated strictly as investment vehicles, they impose a clear drag on capital growth. On a spreadsheet, the critique is mathematically correct.
The issue is not the math. The issue is the frame.
A True Observation Inside an Incomplete Model
The statement “insurance costs reduce capital growth” is accurate—but incomplete.
It assumes that:
Capital exists primarily to compound
Growth is the dominant objective
Liquidity is always available
Risk is best managed through diversification alone
These assumptions hold inside traditional portfolio construction. They become less reliable when capital must serve multiple roles simultaneously, including liquidity, risk transfer, tax control, and behavioral stability.
Cash-value life insurance is not designed to maximize returns. It is designed to change how capital behaves under stress.
Evaluating it exclusively through an investment-cost lens misidentifies its function.
Cost vs. the Cost of Capital Access
Fiduciary advisors are trained to scrutinize explicit costs:
Expense ratios
Advisory fees
Insurance charges
But balance-sheet-oriented planning often focuses on something different:
The cost of accessing capital at precisely the wrong time
Market portfolios are liquid only if assets can be sold—often triggering taxes, altering asset allocation, or forcing decisions during unfavorable market conditions.
Insurance-based liquidity does not require liquidation. The cost of that feature is embedded in the policy. It does not disappear simply because it is not itemized like an expense ratio.
What Insurance “Drag” Is Actually Purchasing
The internal cost structure of permanent life insurance is deliberate. It finances structural features that market assets do not provide.
Permanently Underwritten Risk Transfer
Mortality, longevity, and insurability risks are underwritten once and are no longer repriced. Market instruments offer no equivalent mechanism.
Liquidity Without Liquidation
Policy loans allow access to capital without selling assets, triggering taxes, or disrupting portfolio construction.
Non-Correlated Capital
Insurance reserves are not marked to market. They do not experience volatility drag or sequence risk.
Contractual Guarantees
Guarantees always reduce expected return. That is not inefficiency—it is the definition of certainty.
Why Fiduciary Math Keeps “Winning” the Argument
Because the wrong question is being asked.
The question is not:
“Is insurance the cheapest way to grow capital?”
The more relevant question is:
“Is insurance a cost-effective way to ensure capital remains available, predictable, and tax-efficient under stress?”
Different questions produce different conclusions using the same data.
The Marketing Identity Blind Spot
Beyond cost analysis, fee-only advisors operate within a powerful marketing identity:
Compensation comes exclusively from the client
No commissions are received
Conflicts are therefore minimized
This positioning is understandable and often beneficial. It clearly distinguishes fiduciary advice from historically abusive sales practices.
However, this framing can unintentionally create a binary moral narrative:
Fee-only advice = client-aligned
Commission-based solutions = self-interested
Once this narrative takes hold, it becomes easy to treat most permanent life insurance—outside of term coverage or estate planning—as inherently suspect or unethical.
The AUM and Non-Billable Asset Bias
There is also a structural consideration that rarely gets acknowledged.
Cash-value life insurance:
Is not managed
Cannot be billed on an AUM basis
Removes assets from advisory fee calculations
With rare exceptions (such as complex private placement life insurance for ultra-high-net-worth clients), these assets cannot be levied for an advisory fee.
As a result, insurance-based capital does not further an advisor’s business growth objectives in the same way managed assets do.
Over time, this reinforces an implicit belief:
“If an asset cannot be managed, billed, or optimized, it must be inferior.”
This bias does not require bad faith. It emerges naturally from how advisory practices are built.
When Marketing Position Becomes a Constraint on Inquiry
If an advisor cannot recommend or implement a solution without undermining their stated value proposition, that solution is unlikely to be explored deeply.
Because fee-only advisors generally:
Cannot sell insurance
Do not control policy design
Are not compensated for implementation
They may conclude, often unconsciously:
“If I can’t recommend it within my model, it probably shouldn’t be recommended at all.”
This is a limitation of structure, not intent.
The “Don’t Talk to Insurance Agents” Narrative
There is also a common belief that objective advice about life insurance requires avoiding life insurance professionals altogether, out of fear of being sold or over-sold.
While understandable, this logic has an unintended consequence.
Seeking guidance exclusively from professionals who cannot implement or be compensated for a solution will reliably produce advice that excludes that solution. That does not necessarily make the advice wrong—but it does make it predictable.
The same dynamic applies to internet research: incentive-free information may reduce sales pressure, but it also lacks context, accountability, and implementation expertise.
The Comparison That Rarely Gets Made
In the broader context of portfolio construction, cash-value life insurance is rarely intended to replace equities. A more appropriate comparison is against the capital required elsewhere to produce the same usable outcome.
This is where the concept of Capital Equivalent Value becomes relevant.
Capital Equivalent Value asks a different question than traditional return analysis:
How much capital would be required in a taxable or tax-deferred account to generate the same net, spendable cash flow as a smaller amount of policy-based capital accessed through loans?
Because policy loans are not taxable income, it often takes significantly more capital in qualified plans or taxable accounts to produce the same after-tax retirement cash flow—particularly once required distributions, marginal tax rates, and timing risk are considered.
Viewed through this lens, cash-value life insurance is less about maximizing account balances and more about minimizing the capital required to achieve a given income objective.
From that perspective, the more appropriate comparison is not against equities, but against the combined cost of:
Excess cash reserves held for safety rather than efficiency
Low-yield fixed income used to dampen volatility
Behavioral errors during market downturns
Tax friction created by asset liquidation
Sequence risk during early withdrawal years
When evaluated as part of a capital system, rather than as a standalone investment competing on raw returns, the apparent cost gap often narrows—and in some scenarios, reverses.
Where the Criticism Is Valid
Skepticism is appropriate when:
Policies are over-insured
Early cash value is poor
Riders are unnecessary or misused
Insurance is sold as a market substitute
Death benefit is disconnected from planning needs
These are design failures—not structural flaws.
When Mutual Understanding Isn’t Possible
In theory, professional disagreement should be resolvable through shared facts and good-faith dialogue. In practice, that is not always the case.
Some professionals become deeply entrenched in their mental models, incentives, and public positioning. When a worldview is tightly bound to how one is compensated, how one markets, and how one defines ethical behavior, alternate frameworks can feel less like differences of opinion and more like threats to identity.
In these situations, attempts to “broker peace” or achieve consensus often fail—not because the argument lacks merit, but because accepting it would require acknowledging blind spots that undermine long-held positioning.
At that point, further explanation does not clarify—it entrenches.
A More Productive Standard
The goal is not universal agreement.
It is clarity.
Clarity about:
What problem is being solved
What role a tool is designed to play
What assumptions are being made
Where legitimate tradeoffs exist
Once those boundaries are clear, disagreement becomes acceptable—even healthy.
Conclusion
Fee-only fiduciary advisors play an essential role in protecting clients from excessive costs and misaligned incentives. Their emphasis on transparency and client-paid compensation has raised standards across the profession.
However, when investment-centric metrics, marketing identity, AUM economics, and implementation constraints define what is considered valid planning, blind spots emerge.
Cash-value life insurance is not an inefficient investment—it is a deliberately constrained growth vehicle designed to solve a different class of problems. When evaluated using the wrong metrics—or dismissed because it does not fit a particular business model—it will always appear unnecessary.
Understanding that distinction is not a rejection of fiduciary principles. It is an expansion of them.
And in some cases, respectful separation of philosophies is not a failure of professionalism—but an honest acknowledgment of its limits.














