The correct rider is the payor rider. A payor rider is commonly attached to juvenile life insurance policies. It provides that if the adult premium payor, usually a parent or guardian, dies or becomes disabled before the insured child reaches a specified age, the insurer will waive the premiums or continue the policy according to the rider terms until the child reaches that age. The reason this rider exists is that the insured child is not normally the person responsible for paying premiums. The policy could otherwise lapse if the adult payor dies or becomes disabled. A guaranteed insurability rider allows the insured to buy additional insurance at specified dates or life events without proof of insurability, but it does not pay juvenile policy premiums. A waiver of premium rider normally applies to the insured’s disability, not specifically the parent-payor’s disability or death. An automatic premium loan rider uses cash value to prevent lapse, but it does not create a juvenile-specific payor protection. Reference topics: Juvenile Life Insurance, Payor Rider, Waiver of Premium, Policy Lapse Protection.
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