Key Takeaways

  • New Jersey requires detailed written notice and comparison when replacing life insurance or annuities
  • Producers must provide a Replacement Notice to the applicant and Notice to existing insurer
  • The replacing insurer must maintain replacement records for at least 5 years
  • The existing insurer has 20 days to provide policy information to the policyholder
  • Twisting (misrepresenting to induce replacement) is a serious violation with license revocation
Last updated: January 2026

New Jersey Replacement Rules

Replacement occurs when a new life insurance policy or annuity is purchased with the intent to terminate, surrender, or reduce coverage under an existing policy. New Jersey has detailed regulations to protect consumers from unsuitable replacements.

Definition of Replacement

A replacement occurs when a new policy is purchased and:

  • An existing policy is lapsed, forfeited, or surrendered
  • Policy values are reduced or borrowed
  • Coverage is converted or reduced
  • Policy is reissued with reduced values
  • Policy is amended to reduce benefits

Required Disclosures

Replacement Notice

The producer must provide the applicant with a Replacement Notice that includes:

ItemRequirement
ComparisonSide-by-side of existing and new policy
Surrender ValuesCurrent and projected values
Death BenefitsComparison of coverage amounts
Premium CostsCost difference over time
Surrender ChargesCharges for early termination
New ContestabilityNew 2-year period starts

Notice to Existing Insurer

Within 5 business days of receiving the application, the replacing insurer must notify the existing insurer:

  • Name of policyholder
  • Policy number being replaced
  • Name of new insurer
  • Type of new coverage

Conservation Period

The existing insurer has 20 days to provide information to the policyholder:

  • Explain the value of existing coverage
  • Provide policy benefit information
  • Offer options to preserve the policy
  • Cannot make false statements about new insurer

Prohibited Practices

Twisting

Twisting is the practice of misrepresenting the terms or benefits of an existing policy to induce a policyholder to replace it.

Examples of twisting:

  • Falsely claiming existing policy is "worthless"
  • Misrepresenting surrender values
  • Hiding surrender charges of replacement
  • Exaggerating benefits of new policy

Penalties for twisting:

  • License suspension or revocation
  • Fines up to $10,000 per violation
  • Civil liability to harmed consumers
  • Criminal prosecution in severe cases

Churning

Churning is excessive replacement of policies to generate commissions.

Red flags for churning:

  • Multiple replacements in short periods
  • Same client replacing policies repeatedly
  • Pattern across producer's book of business
  • Surrender charges not disclosed

Records Retention

New Jersey requires insurers to maintain replacement records for:

Record TypeRetention Period
Replacement notices5 years
Comparison statements5 years
Suitability documentation5 years
Client correspondence5 years

Producer Responsibilities

Before recommending a replacement, the producer must:

  1. Compare the existing and proposed policies objectively
  2. Consider whether replacement is in client's best interest
  3. Disclose all relevant information including costs
  4. Document the basis for the recommendation
  5. Ensure client understands the consequences

Exam Tip: Remember that a new 2-year incontestability and suicide exclusion period begins with a replacement policy. This is an important disclosure item.

Test Your Knowledge

How many days does the existing insurer have to provide information to the policyholder after receiving a replacement notice in New Jersey?

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Test Your Knowledge

How long must New Jersey insurers retain replacement records?

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