Definition:Attained age
🎂 Attained age is the current age of an insured individual at any given point during the life of a policy, as distinguished from the issue age (the age at which the policy was originally purchased). In life insurance, health insurance, and annuity products, attained age serves as a primary rating factor because mortality and morbidity risk increase as a person grows older. The distinction between attained-age rating and issue-age rating represents one of the most consequential design choices in insurance product construction, directly affecting how premiums evolve over time and how risk is shared among policyholders of different ages.
📈 Under an attained-age rating methodology, premiums are recalculated at each policy anniversary or renewal based on the insured's current age, meaning costs rise predictably as the policyholder ages. This contrasts with issue-age rating, where the premium is locked to the age at purchase and remains level (though it may still be adjusted for other factors such as inflation or medical cost trends). In the United States, this distinction is particularly visible in the Medicare supplement insurance (Medigap) market, where insurers may choose among attained-age, issue-age, or community-rated pricing structures depending on state regulation. In other markets — including many Solvency II jurisdictions in Europe and across Asia — attained age similarly underpins the actuarial valuation of reserves for long-duration contracts, since projected future claims costs must reflect the aging of the insured population.
🔑 Grasping the practical implications of attained-age pricing is essential for both consumers and industry professionals. For policyholders, an attained-age-rated product may appear inexpensive at the outset — premiums for a 65-year-old will be lower than those under an issue-age plan designed for the same entry age, because the issue-age plan front-loads cost to keep future premiums stable. However, attained-age premiums accelerate with time, and by age 80 or 85 the cumulative cost may exceed that of an issue-age alternative. For actuaries and product designers, the choice of rating basis shapes lapse assumptions, reserving requirements, and profitability projections. Regulators across jurisdictions monitor attained-age pricing to ensure that rising premiums do not render coverage effectively unaffordable for elderly insureds, a concern that intersects with broader policy debates about access to insurance in aging societies worldwide.
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