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Diploma in Regulated Financial Planning · 2025/2026

R05 Cheat Sheet

Financial Protection — All 10 Learning Outcomes

2025/2026 Syllabus 50 MCQs · 1 hour English law & tax year 2025/2026 All 10 Learning Outcomes
LO1 Market & Consumer LO2 Areas of Need LO3 State Benefits LO4 Life Assurance LO5 Taxation LO6 Income Protection LO7 Critical Illness LO8 Long-Term Care LO9 Other Products LO10 Suitability Key Figures
LO1Consumer & retail market factors and trends relevant to financial protection~3 questions

Role of insurance in mitigating risk

Risk pooling

Premiums from many policyholders are pooled to pay the claims of the few who suffer a loss. Transfers financial risk from the individual to the insurer.

Indemnity principle

Most general insurance aims to restore the insured to their pre-loss position — not to profit from a claim. Life policies pay a fixed agreed sum (not indemnity).

Insurable interest

Required at inception for life assurance. A person has unlimited insurable interest in their own life and that of a spouse/civil partner. Must exist at the time the policy is taken out.

Trends relevant to financial protection

TrendSignificance for protection planning
Health & morbidityRising prevalence of cancer, cardiovascular disease and mental illness increases claims. Improving survival rates mean CI cover is more likely to pay out than in earlier decades.
Longevity & mortalityPeople living longer creates greater need for long-term care. Falling mortality rates tend to reduce life assurance premiums over time.
Employment trendsGrowth of self-employment and gig economy means fewer workers have employer sick pay or group scheme cover — widening the protection gap.
Product designMulti-benefit policies, added-value services (GP helplines, mental health support), partial payment CI conditions and digital distribution.
Consumers consistently underestimate their risk of serious illness and overestimate state/employer support. The "it won't happen to me" bias leads to chronic underinsurance across the UK.

LO2Areas of need for protection planning and main sources of financial protection~3 questions

Health, incapacity & accident

  • Need to replace lost income if unable to work
  • Short-term: employer sick pay or SSP buys time
  • Long-term: income protection / CI essential
  • Self-employed most exposed — no employer safety net

Death, estate & IHT

  • Death of breadwinner creates immediate income shortfall
  • Life assurance can replace income or repay debts
  • IHT: 40% on chargeable estate above NRB (£325,000)
  • Life policy written in trust can fund IHT liability without forming part of estate

Mortgage & debt protection

  • Mortgage repayments continue regardless of death or illness
  • Decreasing term assurance matches repayment mortgages
  • Level term suits interest-only mortgages
  • CI can provide lump sum to repay capital debt

Business protection needs

  • Keyperson: indemnifies the business for financial loss on death/CI of a key employee
  • Shareholder protection: enables surviving owners to buy out the deceased's share
  • Business loan protection: life/CI cover to repay outstanding loans
  • Double option (cross-option) agreement is standard for shareholder protection

Sources of financial protection

SourceExamplesKey limitations
StateSSP, ESA/UC, PIP, bereavement support, state pensionTypically subsistence level; means-tested elements; complex eligibility
EmployerOccupational sick pay, group life, group IP, group CI, EAPCeases on leaving employment; not available to self-employed
Personal insuranceTerm assurance, whole of life, individual IP, CI, LTC insuranceRequires proactive arrangement and ongoing premium payment

LO3Role and limitations of State benefits~3 questions
BenefitKey factsLimitations
Statutory Sick Pay (SSP)£116.75/week; paid by employer from day 4; maximum 28 weeksVery low level; self-employed not eligible
Universal Credit / ESAContributory ESA for those with NI record; means-tested elementSubject to Work Capability Assessment; benefit cap
Personal Independence Payment (PIP)Not means-tested; daily living and/or mobility componentSubject to assessment; not income replacement
New State Pension£221.20/week (full rate); 35 qualifying NI years; payable at SPA (age 66)Does not replace employment income; only from SPA
Bereavement Support PaymentLump sum (£3,500 higher / £500 lower) + up to 18 monthly paymentsTime-limited; cohabiting partners NOT eligible; requires NI contributions from deceased
Support for Mortgage Interest (SMI)Government loan to help pay mortgage interest; secured on propertyMust be repaid with interest on sale; covers interest only, NOT capital
SMI is a LOAN, not a grant. Secured on the property, accrues compound interest, must be repaid on sale. Covers mortgage interest only — not capital repayments.
LA means test for residential care: assets above £23,250 = full self-funding. Between £14,250 and £23,250 = tapered support. Below £14,250 = LA funds care.

LO4Range, structure and application of life assurance and pension-based policies~8 questions

Types of life assurance policy

Policy typeWhat it paysKey uses
Level term assuranceFixed lump sum on death within termFamily protection, interest-only mortgage, business loan
Decreasing term assuranceSum assured reduces over term (tracks repayment mortgage)Repayment mortgage protection
Family income benefit (FIB)Regular income from death to end of termFamily income replacement; avoids lump sum investment decisions
Whole of lifeGuaranteed sum on death at any timeIHT planning, guaranteed legacy, funeral costs
Convertible/renewable termOption to convert to whole of life or renew without further medical underwritingClients whose future needs are uncertain
Investment / assurance bondsLump sum invested; pay on death or surrenderTax-efficient wrapper; IHT planning; 5% annual withdrawal facility

Trusts and wills

Why write in trust?

  • Proceeds paid directly to beneficiaries — bypass the estate
  • Faster payment — no wait for probate
  • Outside estate for IHT purposes

Absolute (bare) trust

  • Beneficiaries are fixed and cannot be changed
  • Simple to set up; suitable where beneficiaries are certain
  • Beneficiary entitled to proceeds at age 18

Discretionary trust

  • Trustees have discretion over who receives proceeds and when
  • Flexible — beneficiaries can be added or changed
  • Useful for IHT planning; family protection
Without a trust: proceeds form part of the estate, may be subject to IHT and cannot be released until probate is granted — a potentially lengthy delay.

Underwriting principles

ConceptExplanation
Duty of fair presentationInsurance Act 2015: applicant must disclose all material facts with reasonable care. Replaced old "utmost good faith" duty.
Proportionate remedyIf insurer would still have offered cover at higher premium, they pay a proportionate claim. If they would have declined entirely, they may void and return premiums.
Terminal illness benefitAccelerates the death benefit if life expectancy is 12 months or less. Not the same as critical illness cover.
Waiver of premiumPremiums waived while policyholder is unable to work due to illness or injury. Deferred period typically 26 weeks.

LO5Taxation treatment of life assurance and pension-based protection policies~6 questions

Qualifying vs non-qualifying policies

FeatureQualifying policyNon-qualifying policy
Proceeds on maturity or deathTax-freeMay be subject to income tax on chargeable gain
Premium structureRegular premiums; must run at least 10 years; doubling rule appliesSingle premium or irregular; investment bonds are the main example

Investment bonds — chargeable events and the 5% rule

5% annual withdrawal allowance: Up to 5% of the original investment may be withdrawn each year on a tax-deferred basis. Unused allowance carries forward cumulatively. Exceeding it, or fully surrendering, triggers a chargeable event.

Onshore vs offshore bonds

FeatureOnshore bondOffshore bond
Tax within fundNotional 20% basic-rate credit treated as paidGross roll-up — minimal tax within fund
Basic-rate taxpayer on surrenderNo further liability20% income tax payable — no credit
Higher-rate taxpayer20% top-up (40% − 20% credit)40% on full gain — no credit
Top-slicing reliefAvailableAvailable
Assignment as gift — chargeable event?YesNo
CGT on surrender?No — gains taxed as incomeNo — same rule

Income tax on protection payouts

Generally tax-free

  • Term assurance / whole of life death proceeds
  • Family income benefit payments to individuals
  • Critical illness lump sum (individual policy)
  • Income protection benefit (individual pays premiums)

Generally taxable

  • Investment bond chargeable event gains — income tax
  • Group IP benefit — taxable as employment income (PAYE)
  • Employer PMI — P11D benefit in kind, taxable on employee

LO6Range, structure and application of income protection insurance~6 questions

Definitions of incapacity — critical exam distinction

Own occupation

Pays if unable to perform the duties of their specific occupation. Most favourable definition. Typically available to professional / non-manual occupations only.

Suited occupation

Pays if unable to work in any occupation for which they are suited by training, education or experience. A compromise definition.

Any occupation

Pays only if unable to perform any work whatsoever. Most restrictive definition — very difficult to claim. Common in group schemes and state benefits.

Key IP policy features

FeatureHow it works
Deferred periodWaiting period before benefit begins (4, 13, 26 or 52 weeks). Should align with employer sick pay or savings.
Benefit amountUp to 50–65% of pre-disability earnings. Long-term IP pays to retirement, death or recovery.
IndexationBenefit increases in line with RPI/CPI during claim to maintain purchasing power.
Proportionate / rehabilitation benefitReduced benefit on partial return to work — avoids financial disincentive to return.
Key exam distinction: Individual IP benefit = TAX-FREE. Employer-funded group IP benefit = TAXABLE as earnings. The question will hinge on who pays the premium.

LO7Range, structure and application of critical illness insurance~6 questions
Critical illness insurance pays a lump sum on diagnosis of a specified condition, provided the insured survives the survival period (typically 14 or 30 days). It does NOT provide ongoing income replacement.

Policy structures

StructureKey characteristics
Accelerated CI (combined life + CI)Most common structure. Pays on CI or death — whichever comes first. One shared sum assured.
Additional CI (life + CI separate)Separate sum assured for CI and for death — both events can pay in full independently. Higher premium.
Standalone CIPays lump sum on CI diagnosis only; no life cover element.

ABI core conditions and exclusions

Seven core ABI conditions

All CII-accredited CI policies must cover: cancer, heart attack, stroke, coronary artery bypass surgery, kidney failure, major organ transplant and multiple sclerosis.

Additional conditions

Policies increasingly cover 40–100+ conditions. Partial payment conditions (e.g. early-stage cancer) pay a smaller sum while preserving the full sum assured for a major claim.

Common exclusions

  • Pre-existing conditions
  • Self-inflicted injury
  • Substance misuse
  • Conditions not meeting the precise policy definition
CI vs IP: CI = lump sum on diagnosis of a specified condition. IP = regular income when unable to work due to any illness/injury. Both needs should be assessed separately.

LO8Range, structure and application of long-term care insurance~3 questions

Main product types

ProductHow it worksKey points
Pre-funded LTC insuranceRegular premiums in advance; benefit triggered when defined level of care need arises (typically 2–3 Activities of Daily Living)Now rare in UK; few providers
Immediate needs annuity (care fee annuity)Single lump sum purchases a guaranteed income for life paid direct to the care providerIncome tax-free if paid direct to registered care provider. Removes longevity risk. Capital not returned on death.
Equity releaseLifetime mortgage or home reversion releases capital from property to fund care costsInterest rolls up on lifetime mortgages. Regulated by FCA.
Immediate needs annuity income is tax-free — but ONLY when paid direct to a registered care provider. If paid to the individual first, it becomes taxable.
LPA exam trap: An LPA must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian before it can be used. It cannot be registered after the person has lost mental capacity. Early registration is essential — takes ~20 weeks.

LO9Main features of other insurance-based protection policies~6 questions

Private medical insurance (PMI)

FeatureDetail
What PMI coversIn-patient and day-patient treatment for acute (curable) conditions; surgery, specialist consultations, diagnostic tests
What PMI typically does NOT coverChronic ongoing conditions, GP services, A&E, normal pregnancy, pre-existing conditions, dental, optical
Moratorium underwritingNo medical questionnaire at outset; conditions in the 5 years before inception excluded for 2 years
Full medical underwriting (FMU)Detailed health questionnaire at outset; exclusions specifically identified. Greater certainty.
Individual PMI — taxPremiums from net income; benefits received tax-free
Employer-provided PMI — taxPremiums are a P11D benefit in kind — taxable on the employee
Employer PMI is a P11D benefit in kind — taxable on the employee as employment income. High-frequency R05 exam topic.

Personal accident & PPI

Personal accident insurance

  • Lump sum for specified consequences of an accident: death, loss of limb, loss of sight, permanent total disablement
  • Accident only — does not cover illness
  • No medical underwriting; low premiums

Payment protection insurance (PPI)

  • Covers loan/mortgage repayments on accident, sickness and/or redundancy
  • Typically 12–24 months maximum benefit period
  • Self-employed and directors typically excluded from redundancy element
  • Must be involuntary redundancy

LO10Evaluating needs, priorities and selecting appropriate protection solutions~6 questions

Business protection mechanics

Shareholder / partner protection

  • Cross-option (double option) agreement: On death, surviving shareholders have the option to buy AND the estate has the option to sell. Neither side is forced.
  • Sum assured = each shareholder's proportion of agreed business value
  • Regular review of business valuation essential

Keyperson insurance — tax treatment

  • Revenue/profit indemnity purpose: Premiums deductible; proceeds taxable
  • Capital / loan repayment purpose: Premiums NOT deductible; proceeds tax-free
  • HMRC guidance BIM45525: tax treatment depends on purpose, not just structure

Life events — protection review triggers

Life eventProtection implications
Marriage / civil partnershipNew dependant; update life nominations; review cover levels; insurable interest confirmed
Co-habitationNo automatic legal rights unlike marriage. Trust nominations critical; will essential; no BSP entitlement
Birth of childMajor increase in IP and life cover need; FIB may suit ongoing income need
Property purchaseMortgage protection: life and CI cover to clear mortgage; term should match mortgage term
Separation and divorceRemove ex-spouse from nominations; update will; review trust beneficiaries
RetirementIP less relevant; LTC planning more important; life cover may remain for IHT purposes

Suitability of trusts

SituationTrust recommendation
Whole of life for IHT planningMust be in trust — otherwise proceeds increase the estate and are subject to the very IHT they are meant to cover
Unmarried cohabiting coupleTrust essential — no automatic next-of-kin rights; without a trust, proceeds may not reach the intended beneficiary
Business keyperson / shareholder protectionAppropriate trust or ownership structure depending on purpose and tax treatment

FIGURESKey figures, tax tables & exam traps 2025/2026Tax tables provided in exam

State benefit rates 2025/2026

£116.75
SSP per week (from day 4, max 28 weeks)
£221.20
Full new State Pension per week
£3,500
BSP higher rate lump sum (with children)
£500
BSP lower rate lump sum (no children)
£26.05
Child Benefit — eldest child per week
£17.25
Child Benefit — additional children per week
35 yrs
NI qualifying years for full State Pension
10 yrs
Minimum NI years for any State Pension

LA care and IHT thresholds 2025/2026

£23,250
LA care: upper threshold — full self-funding above this
£14,250
LA care: lower threshold — full LA funding below this
£325,000
IHT nil-rate band (NRB)
£175,000
Residence NRB (family home to direct descendants)
40%
IHT rate above NRB
£3,000
IHT annual gift exemption

Common R05 exam traps

Trap questionCorrect answer
Is SMI a grant or a loan?A loan — secured on property; repaid with compound interest on sale
SMI — does it cover capital repayments?No — interest payments only
Individual IP benefit — taxable?Tax-free where the individual pays the premiums
Employer-paid group IP / PMI — taxable on employee?Yes — taxable as employment income
Immediate needs annuity — when is income tax-free?Only when paid direct to a registered care provider
CI cover — lump sum or regular income?Lump sum on diagnosis — not ongoing income
Terminal illness benefit — life expectancy threshold?12 months or less
Keyperson cover — when are proceeds taxable?When the purpose is indemnification of lost profits (revenue treatment)
Accelerated vs additional CI?Accelerated = one shared sum (most common). Additional = separate sums — both can pay in full.
LPA — must it be registered before use?Yes — must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian before it can be activated
Cohabiting partner — entitled to BSP?No — BSP is for married couples and civil partners only
Policy written in trust — does it go through probate?No — trust proceeds bypass the estate and probate entirely
Onshore bond assignment as gift — chargeable event?Yes — gain crystallises on assignment
Offshore bond assignment as gift — chargeable event?No — not a chargeable event
Investment bond gains — CGT or income tax?Income tax on the chargeable gain — NOT CGT
ABI core CI conditions — how many?Seven: cancer, heart attack, stroke, coronary artery bypass, kidney failure, major organ transplant, multiple sclerosis

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