Do you have an active mortgage?
What is your primary goal?
Is your household income above $100,000/year?
Why These Products Rarely Compete Directly
Indexed Universal Life (IUL) and Mortgage Protection (MP) serve fundamentally different purposes. Mortgage Protection is a debt-cancellation tool—it pays off your home loan if you die, protecting your family's housing. IUL is a wealth-accumulation vehicle that builds cash value over decades while providing a death benefit. The comparison only becomes relevant when someone is deciding how to split a limited premium budget between two separate financial goals.
Mortgage Protection for Dayton's Homeowners
Homeowning families in Dayton with active mortgages should prioritize Mortgage Protection if their main concern is keeping the house in the family's hands after death. MP is straightforward: the death benefit directly pays the lender, eliminating the debt burden on a surviving spouse or adult children. This product addresses an urgent, concrete need—preventing forced sale or financial strain during an already difficult time. For middle-income households where the mortgage represents the largest family liability, MP delivers focused protection at a lower cost than broader life insurance alternatives.
IUL for Higher-Income Earners
IUL appeals to a different demographic: higher-income individuals who have already maximized 401(k)s, IRAs, and other conventional retirement accounts and want permanent, tax-advantaged growth. The policy's indexed crediting mechanism and flexible withdrawals make sense for those with 20+ year time horizons and the ability to sustain premium payments through market cycles. In Dayton's middle-income context, this audience is smaller but meaningful.
Which Should Come First?
For most Dayton homeowners, Mortgage Protection addresses the more urgent need. IUL is a separate, longer-term conversation best explored after core protection is in place. Licensed Ohio agents serving the area can help you prioritize both goals based on your household income, debt, and retirement readiness.