Title 38 › Part PART II— - GENERAL BENEFITS › Chapter CHAPTER 19— - INSURANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - GENERAL › § 1981
If you gave up a National Service Life Insurance or United States Government life insurance permanent policy for its cash value while on active duty after April 24, 1951 and before January 1, 1957, and you were allowed on December 31, 1958 to reinstate or replace it, you can apply in writing while on continuous active duty that began before January 1, 1959 or within one hundred and twenty days after leaving. You can be given a permanent plan without a medical exam up to the amount you surrendered, or you can reinstate the old policy by paying the required reserve and the current month’s premium. If you were totally disabled before you applied, you must still get any premium waivers and total disability income benefits you would otherwise qualify for. The United States will pay the cost of those waived premiums, the disability payments, and any extra death costs, and the Secretary will move money between the government insurance funds to cover those costs. If your five-year level premium term policy ran out while you were on active duty after April 25, 1951, or within one hundred and twenty days after leaving service, and before January 1, 1957, and you could replace it on December 31, 1958, you may apply while on qualifying active duty (or within one hundred and twenty days after) and, if you pay premiums and show proof of good health acceptable to the Secretary, receive the same amount of five-year level term insurance at the premium rate for your then attained age.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 1981
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73