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LIC AAO Premium Calculation

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This page covers LIC AAO Premium Calculation with complete concept notes, 18 graded practice MCQs, key points and exam-specific tips. Free to study.

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Concept Notes

Premium Calculation— Rules & Concept

Core ConceptRead this first — the foundation of the topic

PREMIUM CALCULATION — INSURANCE AWARENESS ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

CORE CONCEPT ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

A premium is the amount you pay to an insurance company to keep your policy active. Think of it as the price you pay for protection. The insurance company calculates this amount carefully so it can pay future claims and still run its business profitably. In simple words: Premium = Price of Insurance Cover.

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ KEY RULES / PROPERTIES

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 1. Higher the risk → Higher the premium.

2. Higher the Sum Assured (coverage amount) → Higher the premium. 3. Older the person → Higher the life insurance premium (more risk of death).

4. Longer the policy term → Premium per year may be lower, but total paid is more. 5. The premium has two main parts: Pure Premium (covers actual risk/claims) and Loading (covers expenses, profit, and contingencies).

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Formula BlockMemorise — at least one formula appears in every paper

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Gross Premium = Pure Premium + Loading
Pure Premium = (Probability of Loss) x (Sum Assured)
Net Premium Rate = (Pure Premium / Sum Assured) x 1000

[This gives the rate per Rs. 1000 of Sum Assured]

Loading includes: expenses + profit margin + contingency reserve

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Exam PatternsWhat examiners ask — read before attempting PYQs

— WHAT GETS ASKED ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ • Definition-based MCQs: 'Which factor does NOT affect premium?' • Calculation-based MCQs: Find premium given Sum Assured and rate per Rs. 1000. • Concept MCQs: 'What is loading in premium calculation?' • Comparison MCQs: 'Which type of policy has the lowest premium — Term, Endowment, or Whole Life?' Note: Term Insurance has the LOWEST premium. Whole Life has HIGHER premium than Term. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ SHORTCUT / TRICK ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ TRICK 1 — Premium Calculation from Rate per 1000: Premium = (Sum Assured / 1000) x Rate Example shortcut: Sum Assured = Rs. 5,00,000 | Rate = Rs. 25 per 1000 Premium = (500000 / 1000) x 25 = 500 x 25 = Rs. 12,500 TRICK 2 — Factor

Memory HookRemember this — never confuse the two again

using 'ASHM': A = Age of insured S = Sum Assured H = Health / Occupation / Habits M = Mode of premium payment (monthly/annually) All four increase or decrease the premium. Remember ASHM. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

Worked ExampleSolve this step-by-step before moving on

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Question: Ramesh takes a life insurance policy. Sum Assured = Rs. 10,00,000. The premium rate is Rs. 30 per Rs. 1,000 of Sum Assured.

Loading is 20% of Pure Premium. Find the Gross Premium. Step 1 — Find Pure Premium: Pure Premium = (Sum Assured / 1000) x Rate Pure Premium = (10,00,000 / 1000) x 30 Pure Premium = 1000 x 30 = Rs. 30,000 Step 2 — Find Loading: Loading = 20% of Pure Premium Loading = 20/100 x 30,000 = Rs. 6,000 Step 3 — Find Gross Premium: Gross Premium = Pure Premium + Loading Gross Premium = 30,000 + 6,000 = Rs. 36,000 Answer: Gross Premium = Rs. 36,000 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

Exam TrapsCommon mistakes students make — avoid these

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Students confuse Pure Premium with Gross Premium. Pure Premium only covers the risk cost. Gross Premium is what you actually pay — it includes loading (admin costs + profit).

Always add loading to get the final payable premium. Never skip Step 2 in calculations.

Key Points to Remember

  • Premium is the amount paid by the policyholder to the insurer to keep the policy active.
  • Gross Premium = Pure Premium + Loading; this is the actual amount paid.
  • Pure Premium = Probability of Loss × Sum Assured; it covers only the risk cost.
  • Loading covers administrative expenses, agent commission, profit margin, and contingency reserve.
  • Formula: Premium = (Sum Assured ÷ 1000) × Rate per 1000 — most common exam calculation.
  • Higher age, higher Sum Assured, and risky occupation all lead to higher premiums.
  • Term Insurance has the lowest premium among all life insurance products.
  • Mode of payment affects premium: monthly payment costs more in total than annual payment.

Exam-Specific Tips

  • The person who calculates insurance premium using statistical data is called an Actuary.
  • Pure Premium is also called Net Premium or Risk Premium in insurance terminology.
  • Loading typically includes three components: expense loading, profit loading, and contingency loading.
  • Term Insurance provides pure risk cover with no maturity benefit, hence lowest premium.
  • Endowment policies have higher premiums than Term policies because they combine savings and risk cover.
  • The practice of setting different premiums based on risk level is called Risk Classification or Underwriting.
  • Rebate on premium is allowed under Section 59 of the Insurance Act, 1938 only in specific conditions.
  • Under IRDAI regulations, insurers must file premium rates with IRDAI before offering any product to the market.
Practice MCQs

Premium Calculation — Practice Questions

18graded MCQs · easy to hard · full solution & trap analysis

All MCQs →
Practice 1easy

In premium calculation for a health insurance policy, the insurer applies a loading of 15% to the base premium due to the proposer's pre-existing medical condition. Under IRDAI guidelines, what is the maximum loading that can be applied for health-related risk factors without requiring explicit regulatory approval?

Practice 2easy

A motor insurance policy is issued with a premium of ₹12,000 per annum. The insurer applies a No-Claim Bonus (NCB) of 20% to the renewal premium after the insured completes one claim-free year. What is the renewal premium payable by the insured after the NCB is applied?

Practice 3easy

Under the Insurance Act 1938, which section governs the principle of Insurable Interest and requires that the insured must have a financial stake in the subject matter of insurance at the time of loss?

Practice 4easy

A proposer for a general insurance policy fails to disclose a material fact about the risk at the time of proposal. Under the principle of Utmost Good Faith (Uberrima Fides), what is the insurer's right in this scenario?

Practice 5easy

In premium calculation for a general insurance policy, the insurer uses the following components: Base Rate + Loading for Risk Factors + Administrative Expenses + Profit Margin. Which of these components is NOT directly recoverable from the insured through the premium under IRDAI guidelines?

Practice 6easy

An insured holds two separate general insurance policies covering the same property against fire loss. The property suffers a fire loss of ₹10 lakhs. Both policies are valid and in force. Under the principle of Contribution, what is the maximum amount the insured can recover in total from both insurers combined?

Practice 7medium

An insurer uses the following formula to calculate annual premium for a health insurance policy: Base Premium = (Claims Cost × (1 + Loading Factor)) / (1 − Expense Ratio). If claims cost is ₹1,000, loading factor is 0.25, and expense ratio is 0.20, what is the approximate base premium?

Practice 8medium

A 35-year-old policyholder purchases a term insurance policy with a sum assured of ₹50 lakhs. The insurer calculates the annual premium at ₹12,000 based on mortality risk, expense loading, and profit margin. Which principle of insurance does the expense loading component directly reflect?

Practice 9medium

A general insurance company issues a motor third-party liability policy with a sum insured of ₹1 crore. The insurer applies a 'No Claim Bonus' (NCB) of 20% to the annual premium of ₹15,000 after the policyholder completes one claim-free year. Under IRDAI regulations, what is the maximum NCB that can be offered on motor third-party policies?

Practice 10medium

An insurer calculates the premium for a fire insurance policy on a warehouse using the formula: Premium = (Sum Insured × Rate per ₹100 × Risk Adjustment Factor) / 100. If Sum Insured = ₹50 lakhs, Rate per ₹100 = ₹0.50, and Risk Adjustment Factor = 1.25 (due to high fire hazard location), what is the annual premium?

Practice 11medium

A life insurance company uses the following premium calculation method for a 10-year endowment policy: Annual Premium = (Mortality Cost + Expense Loading + Profit Margin) / Discount Factor. For a 30-year-old male, Mortality Cost = ₹5,000, Expense Loading = ₹2,000, Profit Margin = ₹1,500, and Discount Factor = 0.95. What is the annual premium (rounded to nearest ₹100)?

Practice 12medium

An insurer issues a group health insurance policy covering 500 employees. The insurer calculates the group premium using: Group Premium = (Total Claims Cost × (1 + Loading Factor)) / Number of Employees. If Total Claims Cost = ₹1,00,00,000, Loading Factor = 0.30, and Number of Employees = 500, what is the per-employee annual premium?

Practice 13hard

An insurer uses the following premium calculation model for a 10-year term insurance policy: Office Premium = [Net Premium ÷ (1 − Loading %)] − Net Premium. The net premium is ₹500 per annum, and the loading percentage is 25%. What is the office premium per annum?

Practice 14hard

An insurance company calculates the net premium for a 10-year endowment policy using mortality tables and interest assumptions. The net premium is ₹500 per annum. To arrive at the office premium that the policyholder actually pays, which of the following components must be added to the net premium?

Practice 15hard

A 35-year-old male applies for a ₹50 lakh term insurance policy. The underwriter discovers that the applicant has a history of hypertension but failed to disclose this in the proposal form. The insurer decides to charge an extra premium (loading) of 25% due to this health risk. Under which principle of insurance law can the insurer legally impose this extra premium despite the non-disclosure?

Practice 16hard

An insurer uses the following formula to calculate the office premium for a 20-year endowment policy: Office Premium = [Net Premium × (1 + Loading %)] + Policy Fee. The net premium is ₹1,000 per annum, loading is 30%, and the policy fee is ₹100 per annum. However, the insurer also applies a 5% Goods and Services Tax (GST) on the total premium. What is the final amount the policyholder must pay per annum?

Practice 17hard

An insurer calculates the net premium for a whole life policy using the following actuarial inputs: (1) Mortality rate from standard mortality table, (2) Interest rate (discount rate) of 4% per annum, (3) Expense loading of 10%. Which of these inputs is NOT a component of the net premium calculation but is added separately as loading?

Practice 18hard

A life insurance company offers a 15-year endowment policy with a minimum guaranteed sum assured of ₹10 lakh. The policy includes a non-guaranteed bonus component. The insurer calculates the net premium assuming a bonus rate of 5% per annum (compound). However, due to adverse market conditions, the insurer declares a bonus rate of only 2% per annum in Year 1. Under which principle of insurance law is the insurer legally protected from liability for the shortfall in declared bonus?

60-Second Revision — Premium Calculation

  • Formula: Gross Premium = Pure Premium + Loading — never forget to add loading.
  • Formula: Premium = (Sum Assured ÷ 1000) × Rate — use this directly in MCQ calculations.
  • Remember ASHM factors that affect premium: Age, Sum Assured, Health/Occupation, Mode of payment.
  • Trap: Exams may ask 'what is NOT a component of loading' — Loading does NOT cover claim amount directly.
  • Remember: Term < Endowment < Whole Life — this is the order of premium from lowest to highest.
  • Pure Premium = Net Premium = Risk Premium — all three names mean the same thing in MCQs.
  • The professional who calculates premiums using mortality tables and statistics is called an Actuary.
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