If the application is not prepaid, coverage generally becomes effective when the producer delivers the policy and collects the first premium, assuming the insured’s health and other insurability conditions have not changed. Without initial premium, there is normally no conditional receipt creating temporary coverage while underwriting is pending. Signing the application does not put insurance in force by itself. Mailing the application to the insurer also does not create coverage; it only starts the underwriting process. Even company underwriting approval may not fully activate the contract if the policy has not been delivered and the first premium has not been paid. In a non-prepaid case, the insurer issues the policy after approval, and the producer obtains the premium at delivery. The applicant may also be required to sign a statement of continued good health. The exam rule is direct: prepaid application may involve conditional coverage; non-prepaid application usually becomes effective at delivery plus premium collection. Reference topics: Policy Effective Date, Policy Delivery, First Premium, Conditional Receipt, Statement of Good Health.
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