
Personal Finance
4 min read
- By Priyesh Mishra
Term Plan with ROP: Why It Almost Never Makes Sense
A Rs. 1 crore pure term plan costs Rs. 12,000/year at age 30. The same Rs. 1 crore with Return of Premium (ROP) costs Rs. 32,000/year. The seller frames ROP as "your money back if you survive". In return, you pay Rs. 20,000 extra per year. Which, invested in index funds at 10% CAGR, would have grown to Rs. 25 lakh over 30 years. ROP is a savings plan masquerading as insurance, and the savings rate it offers (Rs. 9.6 lakh back on Rs. 9.6 lakh input = 0% real return) is worse than a bank FD.
By the end, you will know the ROP math, when (if ever) it is worth the premium, and the pure-term + index-SIP alternative that dominates it over any time horizon.
The math
Pure-term premium difference over ROP = ~Rs. 20k/year x 30 years = Rs. 6 lakh total extra premium paid. ROP returns the entire premium at end of term = Rs. 32k x 30 = Rs. 9.6 lakh. Net benefit from ROP relative to paying pure term = Rs. 9.6 lakh return - Rs. 6 lakh extra paid = Rs. 3.6 lakh "benefit" over 30 years. But that Rs. 6 lakh (Rs. 20k/year) was paid over 30 years; its present value matters, not nominal.
Alternative: buy pure term at Rs. 12k, invest Rs. 20k/year in an index fund at 10% CAGR. After 30 years: ~Rs. 33 lakh corpus. The "ROP advantage" of Rs. 3.6 lakh nominal is not an advantage. It is an opportunity cost of ~Rs. 29 lakh vs the index SIP route. Put differently: ROP offers you back Rs. 9.6 lakh (your own money, 0% interest) in exchange for giving up the Rs. 33 lakh you could have had.
Why people still buy ROP
The "I get something back" psychology. The premium return at end of term feels like validation. "I did not just pay insurance for nothing". Insurance agents exploit this; the commission on ROP is roughly 3x the commission on pure term for the same cover. The behavioural economics is clear: humans hate "losing" premium payments and will pay a large premium to eliminate that feeling, even when the alternative (invest the delta) is demonstrably better.
The behavioural argument for ROP: forced savings discipline. If you pay pure term + promise to invest the difference, but in practice spend the "saved" premium. Then ROP wins by capturing the savings that would have been lost. If you genuinely auto-SIP the difference, pure term dominates. Know yourself: are you disciplined with SIPs, or does money unallocated disappear?
The premium returned is not what it looks like
ROP returns the NOMINAL premium paid. Not inflation-adjusted, not interest-bearing. Rs. 9.6 lakh in year 30 has real purchasing power of roughly Rs. 3 lakh in today's rupees at 6% inflation. So the "return" is really Rs. 3 lakh real value on Rs. 6 lakh real-value extra paid over 30 years. A 50% LOSS in real terms. No financial product outside insurance could sell a "get back 50% real" product successfully; ROP succeeds because the loss is invisible.
ROP is not investment return
ROP is not investment return
Cancellation / surrender harsher than pure term
The only valid use case
Key Takeaways
- ROP costs ~2.5-3x pure term premium for the same cover.
- The "refund" at end is nominal (no interest, no inflation adjustment) = ~50% real loss.
- Pure term + index SIP always dominates ROP mathematically.
- The only "benefit" is behavioural. Forced investment via higher premium.
- If you need forced saving, a direct SIP is cheaper and more transparent.
Read Next
ROP is the cousin of endowment plans. The insurance-plus-investment hybrid that has cost Indian families an estimated Rs. 30-50k crore in hidden commissions. If you hold one, the surrender decision matters.
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