If you've spent any time on YouTube researching whole life insurance, you've probably heard someone in a suit explain that you can "be your own bank." It usually comes with a whiteboard, an enthusiastic accent, and a promise that traditional banking is broken. The strategy they're describing is real — it's called the infinite banking concept, and I design policies around it for Florida clients every month. The pitch is half-true. The mechanics work. But how it actually plays out in Florida depends a lot on how the policy is built and how disciplined you are about using it.
What Infinite Banking Actually Is
Infinite banking is a strategy, not a product. You buy a properly structured whole life policy, fund it heavily through paid-up additions, and once enough cash value has accumulated, you start using policy loans to finance the things you'd otherwise borrow money for — cars, real estate, business expenses, college costs. You repay the loan to the policy on your own terms instead of paying interest to a bank.
The "infinite" part isn't magic. It comes from the fact that your full cash value typically continues earning interest and dividends even while you have a loan outstanding (this is called non-direct recognition, and not every carrier offers it). So you're effectively earning on the same dollar twice — once inside the policy, once through the asset you bought with the loan.
Why Florida Is a Strong Fit
A few features of Florida law and tax structure stack the deck in favor of this strategy:
- No state income tax. Cash value growth compounds federally tax-deferred, and Florida doesn't take a cut at the state level either. Compared to a New Yorker or Californian running the same strategy, the Floridian keeps meaningfully more.
- Florida Statute 222.14. Cash value inside a Florida-resident life insurance policy is generally protected from most creditors. For business owners, real estate investors, and professionals with liability exposure, that's a meaningful layer of asset protection most savings accounts don't offer.
- No state estate tax. When the policy eventually pays a death benefit, your beneficiaries receive it free of federal income tax and free of any state-level estate tax.
Combine those three and Florida is one of the more favorable states in the country for running a long-term policy-based banking strategy.
How the Policy Has to Be Designed
A standard whole life policy bought off the shelf is not built for infinite banking. To make the strategy work, the policy needs three specific design choices:
- Maximum paid-up additions rider. The PUA rider is what loads cash value into the policy quickly. Without it, you're waiting 10 to 15 years for usable liquidity. With it aggressively funded, you typically have access to a meaningful portion of your contributions inside the first few years.
- Minimum base death benefit. Counterintuitive, but true. The lower the base death benefit relative to the premium, the more of your premium goes into cash value. This is the opposite of what most people optimize for.
- Stay below MEC limits. The IRS has rules under Section 7702A that cap how much you can fund a policy in the early years before it gets reclassified as a Modified Endowment Contract. A MEC loses the favorable tax treatment on loans, which kills the strategy. Proper design keeps you below the limit on every year's contribution.
Get any one of those three wrong and the policy underperforms or breaks the tax structure. This is why I tell people not to buy these policies from a captive agent who only sells one carrier — you want someone designing the illustration around your actual goals, not a template.
A [Composite] Florida Example
A composite client of mine — call her a 38-year-old Naples real estate broker with strong cash flow and a small commercial portfolio — uses a high-PUA whole life policy as her transaction reserve. She funds roughly $30,000 a year split between base premium and PUA. After year four, she takes policy loans against the cash value to fund earnest money deposits and quick-close opportunities. She repays the loans into the policy on her own schedule, usually within 12 to 18 months. Her cash value continues to grow on the full amount even while loans are outstanding, and the death benefit doubles as estate planning for her two kids.
The reason this works for her isn't the policy by itself — it's that she actually uses it as a banking system. She has the discipline to repay loans. She uses it for deals where the spread between her loan rate and the deal's return is positive. The policy is a tool. Without the discipline, it's just an expensive savings account.
Where Infinite Banking Falls Apart
Honest section, because plenty of people sell this strategy and skip the caveats:
- It's slow to ramp. Even with maxed PUAs, you usually need 3 to 5 years before the cash value is large enough to be genuinely useful as a banking system. If you need access to liquidity now, this is the wrong tool.
- It's premium-intensive. Running a meaningful infinite banking strategy typically requires $15,000 to $50,000+ a year in premium. If that crowds out your 401(k) match, your emergency fund, or high-interest debt payoff, it's the wrong order of operations.
- Loan rates can change. Most carriers use a variable loan rate. In high-rate environments, the spread between what your cash value earns and what your loan costs can compress. The strategy still works, but the math gets tighter.
- It's not a get-rich vehicle. Whole life cash value typically grows in the low-to-mid single digits long-term, depending on the carrier and dividend scale. Anyone telling you the policy itself produces market-beating returns is selling, not advising.
When It's the Right Move
Infinite banking tends to fit Florida residents who: already have an emergency fund and a maxed retirement account, run their own business or invest in real estate, expect to need access to capital on flexible terms over many years, and value asset protection alongside growth. It's a long-game strategy. Done right, it builds a multi-generational asset that finances your life on your own terms. Done wrong, it's an overpriced savings vehicle.
If you want to see what a properly designed infinite banking policy would actually look like for your situation — your premium, your cash value timeline, your projected loan capacity at year 5, year 10, and year 20 — I can run an illustration that shows the real numbers, guaranteed and projected side by side. Reach out and we'll walk through it together. (Ali Taqi, FL License #W393613.)
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