Term insurance is a must-have in one's financial portfolio to secure one's dependents financially in one's absence and there are variants of term plan as well as different riders you can add-on to benefit further. And when it comes to whether you should opt for pure term plan or return of premium plan, here are some factors you can consider to zero-in your purchase:
First we will begin by highlighting the prime difference between the two:

Also there are other constraints if you go by the Return of Premium plan---
1. Cost: In comparison to the usual term plan, return of premium plan is 2 or 3 times expensive. This is illustrated say for an example, a person aged 35 years who is a non-smoker and buys a sum assured plan of Rs. 1 crore, then the premium for term plan is around Rs. 10,000 while for the same tenure, in case of a return of premium plan the cost comes at around Rs. 39,036.
The reason for the lower cost in case of pure term plan is that it charges for the risk over that it extends.
2. No interest or extra benefit paid back in Return of Premium plan other than the premium amount: It is to be noted that while you pay the premium towards the policy at a regular time period for the term of the plan, you in case of survival through the term obtain only premium amount and any interest amount does not accrue on it.
3. Surrender value: In case if you surrender the pure term plan midway, your policy does not provides you any benefit, but in case of the RoP plan you are allowed a surrender value, i.e. computed basis the premium payment options (but surrender charges are high). So, herein also, even if you decide to exit the plan due to any probable reason, with the term plan you are left with a higher cash amount to consider other investment options than you would be with the RoP plan.
4. Paid up value is the only benefit available with RoP plan: Herein even if you discontinue to pay the premium amount towards the policy, the policy shall still continue but with reduced benefits. But to attain 'paid up value', the premium should have been paid for at least 3 years.
In this case, while at the policy maturity, policyholder will get back the paid premium, in the event of the death also, nominee will be entitled to lowered benefit amount.
Goodreturns.in
More From GoodReturns

New PAN Card Rules From April 1, 2026: How To Apply For New PAN Card Via Protean, E-Filing Portal?

LPG Gas Cylinder Prices Hiked Again From April 1; 19 KG LPG Gets Costlier By Rs 218; 14.2 KG LPG Unchanged

Gold Rate in India Rises Over Rs 37,000/24K in Three Days; Will Jump in Gold Price Today Continue on 31 March?

Gold Price Today Declines After 3-Day Surge; Check Latest 22K, 24K, 18K Gold & Silver Rates in Delhi on 2April

Bank Holiday In April 2026: Banks To Be Closed For 14 Days; Good Friday, Baisakhi To Akshaya Tritiya

Hyderabad Gold Rates Today Crash By Rs 40,000 After 6 Days, Silver Rate Falls By Rs 10,000: 24K, 22K, 18k Gold

Fresh Drop in Gold Rate Today; Silver Stable: Latest 22K, 24K, 18K Gold & Silver Prices in Delhi on 30 March

Gold Rate in India Rebounds After Falling Nearly Rs 40,000 In a Day; Will Gold Price Today Jump or Drop?

Govt Approves PDS Kerosene Distribution in 21 States for 60 Days, Sets 5,000 L Storage Limit Amid LPG Crisis

Bank Holiday Today, Tomorrow & More: Banks Are Closed On March 31, April 1, April 2, April 3; Here's Why

Gold Rate in India After 20% Slide from Record Highs; Will Gold Price Today Jump to Rs 1.50 Lakh on 30 March?



Click it and Unblock the Notifications