As filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on April 19, 2024
Registration No. 333-100567

U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM N-6
SEC File No 811-5130
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
POST EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 24 [X]
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
AMENDMENT NO. 34 [X]
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N
(Exact Name of Registrant)
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.)
(Name of Depositor)
200 Berkeley Street
Boston, MA 02116
(Complete address of depositor’s principal executive offices)
Depositor's Telephone Number: 617-572-6000

MICHAEL A. RAMIREZ
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.)
U.S. INSURANCE LAW
197 CLARENDON ST.
BOSTON, MA 02116
(Name and complete address of agent for service)

Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: As soon as practicable after effectiveness of this amendment.
It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):
[ ]
immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
[X]
on April 29, 2024, pursuant to paragraph (b)
[ ]
60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
[ ]
on ______ pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of Rule 485 under the Securities Act.
If appropriate check the following box
[ ]
this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed post-effective amendment.


John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.)
(“John Hancock USA”)
Flexible Premium Variable Universal Life Insurance Policy
CORPORATE VUL 03
Prospectus dated April 29, 2024
You may choose to allocate your policy value to one or more of the options that the policies make available for that purpose. These options include our “variable investment accounts,” where the policy value will vary directly with the positive or negative investment experience of underlying investment “portfolios.” To provide you with that investment experience, amounts that you allocate to a variable investment account are held in a corresponding “subaccount” of John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N (“Separate Account”), and the subaccount invests those amounts exclusively in one of the portfolios.
You may also allocate policy value to a “fixed account” that the policy makes available. This prospectus provides detailed information about all such options to which you can allocate your policy value.
Please note that the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has not approved or disapproved these securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
Additional information about certain investment products, including variable life insurance, has been prepared by the SEC’s staff and is available at Investor.gov.

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Appendix-1
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important Information you should consider about the policy
FEES AND EXPENSES
Charges for Early
Withdrawals
There is a surrender charge assessed upon termination or reduction of any
coverage amount that is subject to a surrender charge including surrender of
the policy for its net cash surrender value, partial withdrawal in excess of the
Free Withdrawal Amount, decrease in the Face Amount, or policy lapse.
FEE TABLE
Deductions from policy
value
Transaction Charges
In addition to surrender charges (if applicable), you may also be charged for
the following transactions:
A premium load charge will be deducted from each premium payment.
A sales load charge will be deducted from each premium payment.
A transfer fee may be deducted upon transfers into or out of a variable
investment account after you have made more than 12 such transfers in a
year.
FEE TABLE
Deductions from policy
value
Ongoing Fees and
Expenses (annual charges)
In addition to surrender charges and transaction charges, you will also be
subject to certain ongoing fees and expenses, including a cost of insurance
charge, administration fee, a mortality and expense risk fee, policy loan
costs, and supplementary benefit rider charges. Some of these fees and
expenses are based wholly or in part on the characteristics of the insured
persons (e.g., age, sex, and underwriting classification).
You should view the “policy specifications” page of your policy for rates
applicable to your policy.
FEE TABLE
Deductions from policy
value
You will also bear expenses associated with the portfolios under the policy,
as shown in the following table:
Charges at the portfolio
level
APPENDIX
Annual Fee
Minimum
Maximum
Variable investment accounts (portfolio fees
and expenses)
0.44%
2.58%
RISKS
Risk of Loss
You can lose money by investing in this policy.
PRINCIPAL RISKS OF
INVESTING IN A
POLICY
Not a Short- Term
Investment
This policy is not a short-term investment and is not appropriate for
an investor who needs ready access to cash. The policy is unsuitable
as a short-term savings vehicle because of substantial policy-level
charges, including the premium charge and the surrender charge, as
well as potential adverse tax consequences from such short-term use.
Early Surrender or
Withdrawal Risk/Not a
Short-Term Investment
Risks Associated with
Investment Options
An investment in this policy is subject to the risk of poor
performance and can vary depending on the performance of the
account allocation options available under the policy (e.g.,
portfolios). Each such option (including the fixed account) will have
its own unique risks, and you should review these options before
making an allocation decision. You can find the prospectuses and
other information about the portfolios at
dfinview.com/JohnHancock/TAHD/CVUL2003.
Investment Risk/Risk of
Loss
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RISKS
Insurance Company
Risks
Your investment in the policy is subject to risks related to John
Hancock USA, including that the obligations (including under the
fixed account option), guarantees, or benefits are subject to the
claims-paying ability of John Hancock USA. Information about John
Hancock USA, including its financial strength ratings, is available
upon request from your John Hancock USA representative. Our
current financial strength ratings can also be obtained by contacting
the Service Office at 1-800-732-5543.
Depositor
Registrant
Policy Lapse
This policy will go into default if at the beginning of any policy
month the policy’s net cash surrender value would be zero or below
after deducting the monthly deductions then due. The “net cash
surrender value” is your policy value, less any policy debt, and less
any applicable surrender charges. This can happen as a result of
insufficient premium payments, poor performance of the variable or
general account options you have chosen, withdrawals, or unpaid
loans or loan interest. If a default is not cured within a 61-day grace
period, your policy will lapse without value, and no death benefit or
other benefits will be payable. You can apply to reinstate a policy that
has gone into default, subject to conditions including payment of a
specified amount of additional premiums.
Lapse and
Reinstatement
RESTRICTIONS
Investments
There are restrictions that may limit the variable investment account
options and general account options (including the fixed account)
that you may choose, as well as limitations on the transfer of policy
value among those options. These restrictions may include a monthly
limit on the number of transfers you may make. We may also impose
additional restrictions to discourage market timing and disruptive
trading activity.
In particular, your allocation options will be affected if you elect to
take a loan or receive benefits under certain supplementary benefit
riders.
Among other things, the policy also allows us to eliminate the shares
of a portfolio or substitute shares of another new or existing
portfolio, subject to applicable legal requirements.
Limitations on transfers
to or from a variable
investment account
Transfers involving the
fixed account
Portfolios
Optional Benefits
There are restrictions and limitations relating to optional benefits, as
well as conditions under which an optional benefit may be modified
or terminated by us. For example, certain supplementary benefit
riders may be subject to underwriting, and your election of an option
may result in restrictions upon some of the policy benefits, including
availability of investment options.
More About Certain
Optional Benefits
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TAXES
Tax Implications
You should consult with a tax professional to determine the tax
implications of an investment in and payments received under the
policy. There is no additional tax benefit to you if the policy is
purchased through a tax-qualified plan. If we pay out any amount of
your policy value upon surrender or partial withdrawal, all or part of
that distribution would generally be treated as a return of the
premiums you’ve paid and not subjected to income tax, with any
portion not treated as a return of your premiums includible in your
income. Distributions also are subject to tax penalties under some
circumstances.
TAXES
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
Investment Professional
Compensation
Some investment professionals may receive compensation for selling
the policy, including by means of commissions and revenue sharing
arrangements. These investment professionals may have a financial
incentive to offer or recommend this policy over another investment.
Commissions Paid to
Dealers
Exchanges
Some investment professionals may have a financial incentive to
offer you a new policy in place of the one you already own, and you
should only exchange your policy if you determine, after comparing
the features, fees, and risks of both policies, that it is preferable for
you to purchase the new policy rather than continue to own the
existing policy.
Commissions Paid to
Dealers
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Overview of the Policy
Purpose
The policy is designed to provide employers or other organizations with life insurance coverage on employees or other individuals in whose lives they have an insurable interest. The policy may be owned by an individual or a corporation, trust, association, or similar entity. The policy may be used for such purposes as funding non-qualified executive deferred compensation or salary continuation liabilities or death benefit liabilities of executive retirement plans, or as a source for funding cash flow obligations under such plans.
Premiums
We call the investments you make in the policy “premiums” or “premium payments.” The minimum initial premium is a dollar amount that is stated in your policy specifications and that must be paid to us in full before your policy will take effect. Premium payments after the initial premium may not be required, but you must pay enough premium to keep the policy in force. That’s why the policy is called a “flexible premium” policy. After the payment of the initial premium, premiums may be paid at any time and in any amount until the insured person’s attained age 100, subject to the need to pay enough premium to keep the policy in force, and to limitations on maximum premium amount.
Federal tax law limits the amount of premium payments you can make relative to the amount of your policy’s insurance coverage. We will not knowingly accept any amount by which a premium payment exceeds this limit. In addition, in order to limit our investment risk exposure under certain market conditions, we may refuse to accept additional premium payments.
From each premium payment you make, we deduct the applicable premium charges identified in the FEE TABLE. We invest the rest (the “net premium”) in the variable investment accounts or fixed account as you’ve elected.
The policy offers a number of variable investment accounts. You can find some important information about each portfolio in the APPENDIX, but for a full description of each portfolio, including the investment objectives and strategies, policies, restrictions, and risks, you should read the portfolio’s prospectus carefully before investing in the corresponding variable investment account.
You can also allocate policy value to the fixed account (where it is credited with rates of interest that we declare from time to time but will never be less than a minimum rate guaranteed in your policy specifications). If the net cash surrender value is insufficient to pay the charges when due your policy can terminate (i.e. “lapse”). This can happen because you haven’t paid enough premium, because the performance of the variable investment or general account options you’ve chosen has been poor, or because of a combination of all factors.
Policy Features
Death benefit. The policy provides a death benefit in the event of the death of the life insured while the policy is in force. The basic death benefit amount is the Face Amount, which is provided for the lifetime of the life insured with no maturity or expiration date. There may be other amounts added to the death benefit as described below.
Flexible Term Insurance Option. You may add a flexible term insurance option rider (the “FTIO Rider”) to the policy to provide additional term life insurance coverage on the life insured. Cost of insurance rates are less than or equal to those of the policy and no sales loads or surrender charge will apply. However, unlike the Face Amount of the policy, the FTIO Rider will terminate at the life insured’s attained age 100. The FTIO Rider also offers the flexibility to schedule varying death benefit amounts on future dates (the “Scheduled Death Benefits”).
Death Benefit Options. There are two death benefit Options. Option 1 provides a death benefit equal to the Face Amount of the policy and the Scheduled Death Benefits of the FTIO Rider or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit. Option 2 provides a death benefit equal to the Face Amount and the Scheduled Death Benefits, plus the policy value or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit. You may change the death benefit Option and increase or decrease the Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits.
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Age 100 Advantage. If the life insured is alive on the policy anniversary when the life insured reaches attained age 100, the policy will continue in force subject to the following unless the policy owner chooses to surrender the policy for its net cash surrender value:
• the policy will be continued until the earlier of the death of the life insured or the date the policy owner surrenders the policy;
• no additional premium payments will be accepted although loan repayments will be accepted;
• no additional charges or deductions (described under “Charges and Deductions”) will be assessed;
• interest on any Policy Debt will continue to accrue;
• the policy owner may continue to transfer portions of the policy value among the investment accounts and the fixed accounts as described in this prospectus.
Surrender of the policy. You may surrender the policy in full while the insured person is alive. If you do, we will pay you the policy value less any outstanding policy debt and less any applicable surrender fee. This is called your “net cash surrender value.”
Withdrawals. You may make a withdrawal of part of your net cash surrender value at any time. Surrender charges may be assessed on a partial withdrawal.
Policy loans. If your policy is in force and has sufficient policy value, you may borrow from it at any time by completing the appropriate form. The maximum amount you can borrow is determined by a formula as described in your policy. Interest is charged on each loan. If there is an outstanding loan the amount of the loan and accrued interest will be deducted from the death benefit and other policy proceeds.
Supplementary benefit riders. When you apply for the policy, you can request the below-listed supplementary benefit rider that we make available. Availability of riders varies from state to state. Charges for most riders will be deducted monthly from the policy value. Some riders may not be available in combination with other riders or benefits.
Flexible Term Insurance Option Rider You can find information about the fees we charge for this rider under “Transaction Fees” and “Periodic Charges other than Annual Portfolio ExpensesOptional Benefit Charges” in the Fee Table below. We also offer a dollar cost averaging (“DCA”) program and an asset allocation balancer program.
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Fee Table
The following tables describe the fees and expenses that you will pay when buying, owning, and surrendering or making withdrawals from the policy. Please refer to your policy specifications for information about the specific fees you will pay each year based on the options you have elected.
The first table describes the fees and expenses that you will pay at the time that you buy the policy, surrender or make withdrawals from the policy, or transfer policy value between investment options.
TRANSACTION FEES
Charge
When Charge is Deducted
Amount Deducted
Premium load charge
Upon receipt of premium
2% of each premium payment
Premium sales load charge
Upon receipt of premium
8% (coverage year 1)(1)
Surrender charge(1)
Upon termination or reduction of any
coverage amount that is subject to a
surrender charge including surrender of the
policy for its net cash surrender value,
partial withdrawal in excess of the Free
Withdrawal Amount, decrease in the Face
Amount, or policy lapse.
5% (coverage year 1)(2)
Transfer fee(3)
Upon each transfer into or out of a variable
investment account beyond an annual limit
of twelve
$25.00
Dollar cost averaging
Upon transfer
Guaranteed $5.00
Current $0.00
Asset allocation rebalancer
Upon transfer
Guaranteed $15.00
Current $0.00
(1)A policy is subject to either a sales load or a surrender charge but not both. The policy indicates which charge is applicable. The sales load declines in subsequent coverage years as noted below:
Coverage Year
Percentage
1
8.00%
2
6.00%
3
3.00%
4
2.00%
5
1.00%
6+
0.00%
(2)The surrender charge declines in subsequent policy years as noted below:
Coverage Year
Percentage
1
5.00%
2
4.00%
3
3.00%
4
2.50%
5
2.00%
6
1.50%
7
1.00%
8
1.00%
9
0.50%
10+
0.00%
(3)This charge is not currently imposed, but we reserve the right to do so in the policy.
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The next table describes the fees and expenses that you will pay periodically during the time that you own the policy, not including portfolio fees and expenses.
PERIODIC CHARGES OTHER THAN ANNUAL PORTFOLIO EXPENSES
Charge
When Charge is Deducted
Amount Deducted
Base Policy Charges:
 
 
Cost of Insurance(1):
Monthly
 
Minimum charge
 
$0.00 per $1,000 of NAR
Maximum charge
 
$83.33 per $1,000 of NAR
Charge for a representative insured
person (45 year old non-smoking
male)
 
$0.16 per $1,000 of NAR
Policy subject to surrender charge: The
Cost of Insurance rate is $0.35 per month
per $1,000 of the net amount at risk.
Cost of Insurance - Optional FTIO Rider
(Flexible Term Insurance Option)(1)
Monthly
 
Minimum charge
 
$0.00 per $1,000 of NAR
Maximum charge
 
$83.33 per $1,000 of NAR
Charge for a representative insured
person (45 year old non-smoking
male)
 
$0.10 per $1,000 of NAR
Administration fee
Monthly
$12.00
Mortality and expense risk fee(2)
Monthly
0.04% (0.50% annually)
Maximum policy loan interest rate (net)(3)
Accrues daily
Payable annually 7
5% annual rate
(1)The cost of insurance varies based on individual characteristics and the charges shown in the table may not be representative of the charge a particular policy owner will pay. A policy owner may obtain additional information regarding cost of insurance charge by contacting the Company. The election (or failure to elect) the optional FTIO rider will impact the total cost of insurance charges.
(2)Currently the Company is charging the following rates:
Policy Year
Annual Rate
1-10
0.50%
11+
0.20%
(3)The Loan Interest Rate (Net) is equal to the rate of interest charged on the policy loan less the interest credited to the Loan Account. Currently this rate is 0.75% for policy years 1-10 and 0.25% for policy years 11 and higher. The maximum loan rate is 4%.
The next item shows the minimum and maximum total operating expenses charged by the portfolios that you may pay periodically during the time that you own the policy. A complete list of the portfolios available under the policy, including their annual expenses, may be found at the back of this document.
Annual Portfolio Expenses
Minimum
Maximum
Range of expenses that are deducted from portfolio assets, including
management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees, and other
expenses
0.44%
2.58%
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General Description of the Policy
Policy Rights
Owner and beneficiary. The owner of the policy is the person who can exercise most of the rights under the policy, such as the right to choose the accounts in which to invest or the right to surrender the policy. In many cases, the person buying the policy is also the person who will be the owner. However, the application for a policy can name another person or entity (such as a trust) as owner. It is possible to name so-called “joint owners” of the policy. If more than one person owns a policy, all owners must join in most requests to exercise rights under the policy. Whenever we’ve used the term “you” in this prospectus, we’ve assumed that the reader is the person who has whatever right or privilege is being discussed. There may be tax consequences if the owner and the insured person are different, so you should discuss this issue with your tax adviser.
While the insured person is alive, you will have a number of options under the policy. These options include:
• Determine when and how much you allocate to the variable investment accounts and any fixed account
• Borrow or withdraw amounts you have in the variable investment account and any fixed account
• Change the beneficiary who will receive the death benefit
• Change the amount of insurance
• Surrender the policy for its net cash surrender value
• Choose the form in which we will pay out the death benefit or other proceeds
You name your beneficiary when you apply for the policy. The beneficiary is entitled to the proceeds we pay following the insured person’s death. Until the death of the insured person you can change your beneficiary by written request. Such a change requires the consent of any named irrevocable beneficiary. A new beneficiary designation will not affect any payments we make before we receive it. If no beneficiary is living when the insured person dies, we will pay the insurance proceeds to the owner or the owner’s estate.
Allocation of Premiums
You may allocate premiums to the fixed account and investment accounts. Allocations may be made as percentages that are between zero and 100% that sum to exactly 100%. Alternatively, you may allocate a premium in dollar amounts that sum to exactly the net premium amount. You may change premium allocations at any time and the change will take effect on the date a request for change satisfactory to us is received at the Service Office.
Transfers of Policy Value
Transfers to or from a variable investment account. The policy is not designed for professional market timers or highly active traders, including persons or entities that engage in programmed, large or frequent transfers among the investment accounts or between the investment accounts and any available fixed account. The policy is also not designed to accommodate trading that results in transfers that are large in relation to the total assets of the underlying portfolio.
Variable investment accounts in variable life insurance products can be a prime target for abusive transfer activity because these products value their investment options on a daily basis and allow transfers among investment options without immediate tax consequences. As a result, some investors may seek to frequently transfer into and out of variable investment accounts or to make large transfers in reaction to market news or to exploit a perceived pricing inefficiency. Whatever the reason, long-term investors in a variable investment account can be harmed by large or frequent transfer activity. For example, such activity may expose the investment account’s underlying portfolio to increased portfolio transaction costs and/or disrupt the portfolio manager’s ability to effectively manage the portfolio’s investments in accordance with the portfolio’s investment objectives and policies. This could include causing the portfolio to maintain higher levels of cash than would otherwise be the case, or liquidating investments prematurely. Accordingly, frequent or large transfers may result in dilution with respect to interests held for long-term investment and adversely affect policy owners, beneficiaries and the underlying portfolios.
To discourage market timing and disruptive trading activity, we impose restrictions on transfers and reserve the right to change, suspend or terminate telephone and facsimile transaction privileges. In addition, we reserve the right to take other actions at any time to restrict trading, including, but not limited to: (i) restricting the number of transfers made during a
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defined period, (ii) restricting the dollar amount of transfers, (iii) restricting transfers into and out of certain investment options, (iv) restricting the method used to submit transfers, and (v) deferring a transfer at any time we are unable to purchase or redeem shares of the underlying portfolio.
We may also impose additional administrative conditions upon or prohibit a transfer request made by a third party giving instructions on behalf of multiple policies, whether owned by the same owner or different owners. If you engage a third party for asset allocation services, then you may be subject to these transfer restrictions because of the actions of that party in providing those services. We will notify the third party you have engaged if we exercise this right.
While we seek to identify and prevent disruptive trading activity, it may not always be possible to do so. Therefore, no assurance can be given that the restrictions we impose will be successful in preventing all disruptive trading and avoiding harm to long-term investors.
Our current practice is to restrict transfers into or out of variable investment accounts to two per calendar month (except with respect to those policies described in the following paragraph). In applying this restriction any transfer request involving the transfer of account value into or out of multiple variable investment accounts will still count as only one request. No more than one transfer request may be made on any day. You may, however, transfer to the Money Market portfolio even if the two transfer per month limit has been reached, but only if 100% of the policy value in all variable investment accounts is transferred to the Money Market portfolio. If such a transfer to the Money Market investment portfolio is made, then, for the 30 calendar day period after such transfer, no transfers from the Money Market portfolio to any other variable investment accounts or to the fixed account may be made. If a policy offers a dollar cost averaging or automatic asset allocation rebalancing program, any transfers pursuant to such program are not considered transfers subject to these restrictions on frequent trading. The restrictions described in this paragraph will be applied uniformly to all policy owners subject to the restrictions.
Policies may be purchased by a corporation or other entity as a means to informally finance the liabilities created by an employee benefit plan, and to this end the entity may aggregately manage the policies purchased to match its liabilities under the plan. Policies sold under these circumstances are subject to special transfer restrictions. In lieu of the two transfers per month restriction, we will allow the policy owner under these circumstances to rebalance the investment options in its policies within the following limits: (i) during the 10 calendar day period after any account values are transferred from one portfolio into a second portfolio, the values can only be transferred out of the second investment option if they are transferred into the Money Market portfolio; and (ii) any account values that would otherwise not be transferable by application of the 10 day limit described above and that are transferred into the Money Market portfolio may not be transferred out of the Money Market portfolio into any other investment options (variable or fixed) for 30 calendar days. The restrictions described in this paragraph will be applied uniformly to all policy owners subject to the restrictions.
Subject to our approval, we may offer policies purchased by a corporation or other entity that has purchased policies to match its liabilities under an employee benefit plan, as described above, the ability to electronically rebalance the investment options in its policies. Under these circumstances, in lieu of imposing any specific limit upon the number or timing of transfers, we will monitor aggregate trades among the sub-accounts for frequency, pattern and size for potentially harmful investment practices. If we detect trading activity that we believe may be harmful to the overall operation of any investment account or underlying portfolio, we may impose conditions on policies employing electronic rebalancing to submit trades, including setting limits upon the number and timing of transfers, and revoking privileges to make trades by any means other than written communication submitted via U.S. mail. The restrictions described in these paragraphs will be applied uniformly to all policy owners subject to the restrictions.
We reserve the right to modify or terminate the transfer privilege at any time in accordance with applicable law. Transfer privileges are also subject to any restrictions that may be imposed by the portfolios. In addition, we reserve the right to defer the transfer privilege at any time that we are unable to purchase or redeem shares of a portfolio.
Rule 22c-2 under the 1940 Act requires us to provide tax identification numbers and other policy owner transaction information to John Hancock Trust or to other investment companies in which the Separate Account invests, at their request. An investment company will use this information to identify any pattern or frequency of investment account transfers that may violate their frequent trading policy. An investment company may require us to impose trading restrictions in addition to those described above if violations of their frequent trading policy are discovered.
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Transfers involving the fixed account. While the policy is in force, you may transfer the policy value from any of the investment accounts to the fixed account without incurring transfer charges:
• within eighteen months after the Issue Date; or
• within 60 days of the effective date of a material change in the investment objectives of any of the sub-accounts; or
• within 60 days of the date of notification of such change, whichever is later.
Such transfers will not count against the twelve transfers that may be made free of charge in any policy year.
The maximum amount that you may transfer from the fixed account in any one policy year is the greater of $2,000, 15% of the fixed account value at the previous policy anniversary, or the amount transferred out of the fixed account during the previous policy year. Any transfer which involves a transfer out of the fixed account may not involve a transfer to the investment account for the Money Market portfolio.
Telephone transfers. Transfer requests must be in writing in a form satisfactory to us, or by telephone if a currently valid telephone transfer authorization form is on file. Although failure to follow reasonable procedures may result in our being liable for any losses resulting from unauthorized or fraudulent telephone transfers, we will not be liable for following instructions communicated by telephone that we reasonably believe to be genuine. We will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by telephone are genuine. Such procedures shall consist of confirming that a valid telephone authorization form is on file, tape recording of all telephone transactions and providing written confirmation thereof.
Dollar cost averaging and asset allocation balancer programs. We may offer policy owners a dollar cost averaging (“DCA”) program. Under the DCA program, you will designate an amount that will be transferred monthly from one variable investment account into any other variable investment account or a fixed account, . If insufficient funds exist to effect a DCA transfer, the transfer will not be effected and you will be so notified. We do not apply any minimum amount requirements for participation in the DCA program. You can participate in both the dollar cost averaging and asset rebalancing programs at the same time. Under the asset allocation balancer program you will designate an allocation of policy value among variable investment accounts. We will move amounts among the variable investment accounts at specified intervals you select
annually, semi-annually, quarterly or monthly. A change to your premium allocation instructions will automatically result in a change in asset allocation balancer instructions so that the two are identical unless you either instruct us otherwise or have elected the dollar cost averaging program. This asset allocation balancer program only applies to policy value in the variable investment accounts. We reserve the right to cease to offer these programs as of 90 days after written notice is sent to you.
General Account
The fixed account is part of our general account. Our general account consists of all assets owned by us other than those in the Separate Account and any other separate accounts which we have established and may establish. Any interest credited to a policy owner from an investment in a fixed account and any guaranteed benefits we may provide under the policy that exceed the value of amounts held in the Separate Account will be paid from the Company’s general account and will be subject to the Company’s financial strength and claims paying ability. Subject to applicable law, John Hancock USA has sole discretion over the investment of the assets of the general account and policy owners do not share in the investment experience of, or have any preferential claim on, those assets. John Hancock USA bears full investment risk for all amounts allocated to the fixed account.
Because of exemptive and exclusionary provisions, interests in our fixed account have not been and will not be registered under the Securities Act of 1933 and our general account has not been registered as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”). Accordingly, neither the general account nor any interests therein are subject to the provisions of these acts. Disclosures regarding the general account, however, are subject generally to applicable provisions of federal securities laws relating to the accuracy and completeness of statements made in the prospectus.
The fixed account. Account value allocated to any fixed account will accrue interest daily at an effective annual rate that we determine and that depends on a number of significant considerations in addition to the actual investment experience we expect for the general account. We currently offer only one fixed investment optionthe standard fixed account. The effective annual rate we declare for the standard fixed account will never be less than 3%. We reserve the right to offer one or more additional fixed investment options with characteristics that differ from those of the current fixed account, but we are
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under no obligation to do so. Any interest we credit in excess of the guaranteed interest crediting rate will be based on our sole discretion. Additionally, interest credited on a non-guaranteed basis varies over time is rarely the same year-over-year and there may be extended periods of time during which no interest above the guaranteed minimum is declared.
14

Premiums
Purchase Procedures
To purchase a policy, an applicant must submit a completed application. A policy will not be issued until the underwriting process is completed to our satisfaction and we approve issuance of the policy.
Policies may be issued on a basis that does not distinguish between the life insured’s sex and/or smoking status, with prior approval from us. A policy will only be issued on the lives of insureds from Issue Ages 20 through 80. Each policy has a Policy Date, an Effective Date and an Issue Date. The Policy Date is the date from which the first monthly deductions are calculated and from which policy years, policy months and Policy Anniversaries are measured. The Policy Date is also the effective date of the initial coverage amount. The Policy Date is the same date as the Effective Date unless the policy is backdated. The Effective Date is the date we become obligated under the policy and when the first monthly deductions are taken. It is the later of the date we approve issuance of the policy and the date we receive at least the minimum initial premium. The Issue Date is the date from which the Suicide and Incontestability provisions of the policy are measured.
If we approve issuance of a policy before we receive the minimum initial premium then the Effective Date will be later than the Issue Date. The minimum initial premium must be received by us within 60 days after the Issue Date and the life insured must be in good health on the Effective Date. If the minimum initial premium is not paid or if the application is rejected, the policy will be canceled and any premiums paid will be returned to the applicant.
Net premiums received prior to the Effective Date will be credited with interest at the rate of return earned on amounts allocated to the Money Market portfolio. On the Effective Date, net premiums received plus any interest credited will be allocated to investment accounts and the fixed account according to your instructions, unless first allocated to the Money Market Trust for the duration of the right to examine period.
The minimum Face Amount is $50,000 unless the FTIO Rider is added to the policy. With an FTIO Rider, the minimum Face Amount is $25,000 and the minimum Scheduled Death Benefit is $50,000 at all times.
You may request that we backdate the policy by assigning a Policy Date earlier than the date the application is signed. We will not backdate the policy to a date earlier than that allowed by state law, which is generally three months to one year prior to the date of application for the policy. Monthly deductions will be made for the period the Policy Date is backdated.
Temporary insurance agreement. Temporary insurance coverage may be provided under the terms of a Temporary Insurance Agreement, subject to our underwriting practices. Generally, temporary life insurance may not exceed $1,000,000 and may not be in effect for more than 90 days. It is issued on a conditional receipt basis, which means that benefits would only be paid if the life insured met our usual and customary underwriting standards for the coverage applied for.
Underwriting. The policies are offered on three underwriting classes that require different types and amounts of information from the applicant and prospective life insured. Current cost of insurance charges in early policy years will vary by the type of underwriting and charges will generally be lower where underwriting information is more extensive. Under any of the underwriting bases, the acceptance of an application is subject to our underwriting rules and we may request additional information or reject an application for any reason.
Short Form Underwriting. The proposed life insured must answer qualifying questions in the application but is not required to provide detailed medical history, submit records or undergo examinations or tests unless requested to do so by us. Availability of Short Form underwriting depends on characteristics of the Case, such as the number of lives to be insured, the amounts of insurance and other factors, and it is generally available only up to Issue Age 65.
Simplified Underwriting. The proposed life insured must satisfactorily answer certain health questions in the application and may be required to submit existing medical records, but requirements to undergo examinations and tests are minimized. Availability of Simplified underwriting and the nature of the requirements will depend on characteristics of the Case and the proposed lives to be insured.
Regular (Medical) Underwriting. Where Short Form or Simplified underwriting is unavailable we require satisfactory evidence of insurability under our regular underwriting guidelines for individual applicants. This may include medical exams and other information. A proposed life insured who fails to qualify for a standard risk classification may be eligible to be insured with an additional substandard rating.
15

Premium Amount
No premiums will be accepted prior to receipt of a completed application by us. All premiums received prior to the Effective Date of the policy will be held in the general account and credited with interest from the date of receipt at the rate of return earned on amounts allocated to the Money Market Trust.
On the Effective Date, the net premiums paid plus interest credited will be allocated among the investment accounts or the fixed account in accordance with your instructions, unless first allocated to the Money Market Trust for the duration of the right to examine period.
After the payment of the initial premium, premiums may be paid at any time during the lifetime of the life insured prior to attained age 100 and in any amount subject to the premium limitations described below. A policy will be issued with a planned premium, which is based on the amount of premium you wish to pay. We will send you notices of your planned premium at the payment interval you select. However, you are under no obligation to make the planned premium payment.
Payment of premiums will not guarantee that the policy will stay in force and failure to pay premiums will not necessarily cause the policy to lapse. The policy will remain in force so long as the net cash surrender value is sufficient to cover policy charges. If the policy is issued under the GP Test, the total of all premiums paid may not exceed the then-current maximum premium limitations established by federal income tax law for the policy to qualify as life insurance. The GP Test premium limits are stated in the policy. If a premium is received which would result in total premiums exceeding the applicable GP Test limit, we will only accept that portion of the premium that will not exceed the limit. Any premium in excess of that amount will be returned.
If the policy is issued under the CVA Test, there is no restriction on the amount of premiums that may be paid into a policy, but you must provide satisfactory evidence of insurability before we accept any premium that would increase the death benefit by an amount greater than the increase in policy value.
You may allocate premiums to the fixed account and investment accounts. Allocations may be made as percentages that are between zero and 100% that sum to exactly 100%. Alternatively, you may allocate a premium in dollar amounts that sum to exactly the net premium amount. You may change premium allocations at any time and the change will take effect on the date a request for change satisfactory to us is received at the Service Office.
16

Standard Death Benefits
Standard Death Benefits
If the policy is in force at the time of the life insured’s death we will pay an insurance benefit to the beneficiary. The policy may remain in force for the life insured’s entire lifetime and there is no specified maturity or expiration date.
Insurance benefits are only payable when we receive due proof of death at the Service Office, in the form of either a certified copy of the death certificate, a certified copy of a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction as to the finding of death or other proof satisfactory to us.
The amount of the insurance benefit payable will be the death benefit on the date of death, as described below, less any Policy Debt and outstanding monthly deductions on the date of death. The insurance benefit will be paid in one lump sum unless another form of settlement is agreed to by the beneficiary and us. If the insurance benefit is paid in one sum, we will pay interest from the date of death to the date of payment. If the life insured should die after our receipt of a request for surrender, no insurance benefit will be payable, and we will pay only the net cash surrender value.
Minimum death benefit. Both the CVA Test and the GP Test require the death benefit to be at least a prescribed ratio of the policy value at all times. The Policy’s Minimum Death Benefit ensures that these requirements are met by providing that the death benefit shall be at least equal to the policy value multiplied by the applicable Minimum Death Benefit Percentage for the attained age of the life insured. Tables of Minimum Death Benefit Percentages appear below.
Table of Minimum Death Benefit Percentages.
Age
GP
Test
Male
CVA
Test
Unisex
20
250%
653%
779%
67.4%
21
250%
634%
754%
654%
22
250%
615%
730%
635%
23
250%
597%
706%
616%
24
250%
580%
684%
598%
25
250%
562%
662%
579%
26
250%
545%
640%
561%
27
250%
528%
619%
544%
28
250%
511%
599%
526%
29
250%
494%
580%
509%
30
250%
479%
561%
493%
31
250%
463%
542%
477%
32
250%
448%
525%
461%
33
250%
433%
507%
446%
34
250%
419%
491%
432%
35
250%
406%
475%
418%
36
250%
392%
459%
404%
37
250%
380%
444%
391%
38
250%
367%
430%
378%
39
250%
356%
416%
366%
40
250%
344%
403%
355%
41
243%
333%
390%
343%
42
236%
323%
378%
333%
43
229%
313%
366%
322%
44
222%
303%
355%
312%
45
215%
294%
344%
303%
46
209%
285%
333%
294%
47
203%
277%
323%
285%
48
197%
268%
313%
276%
49
191%
260%
304%
268%
Age
GP
Test
Male
CVA
Test
Unisex
50
185%
253%
295%
260%
51
178%
245%
286%
253%
52
171%
238%
278%
245%
53
164%
232%
270%
238%
54
157%
225%
262%
232%
55
150%
219%
254%
225%
56
146%
213%
247%
219%
57
142%
207%
240%
213%
58
138%
202%
233%
208%
59
134%
197%
227%
202%
60
130%
192%
221%
197%
61
128%
187%
214%
192%
62
126%
182%
208%
187%
63
124%
178%
203%
183%
64
122%
174%
197%
178%
65
120%
170%
192%
174%
66
119%
166%
187%
170%
67
118%
162%
182%
166%
68
117%
159%
177%
162%
69
116%
155%
173%
159%
70
115%
152%
169%
156%
71
113%
149%
164%
152%
72
111%
146%
160%
149%
73
109%
144%
156%
146%
74
107%
141%
153%
144%
75
105%
139%
149%
141%
76
105%
136%
146%
139%
77
105%
134%
143%
136%
78
105%
132%
140%
134%
79
105%
130%
138%
132%
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Age
GP
Test
Male
CVA
Test
Unisex
80
105%
129%
135%
130%
81
105%
127%
133%
128%
82
105%
125%
130%
127%
83
105%
124%
128%
125%
84
105%
122%
126%
123%
85
105%
121%
124%
122%
86
105%
120%
123%
121%
87
105%
119%
121%
119%
88
105%
118%
119%
118%
89
105%
116%
118%
117%
90
105%
116%
117%
116%
Age
GP
Test
Male
CVA
Test
Unisex
91
104%
115%
115%
115%
92
103%
114%
114%
114%
93
102%
112%
113%
113%
94
101%
111%
112%
111%
95
100%
110%
110%
110%
96
100%
109%
109%
109%
97
100%
107%
107%
107%
98
100%
106%
106%
106%
99
100%
105%
105%
105%
100+
100%
100%
100%
100%
Flexible Term Insurance Option Rider. You may add the FTIO Rider to the policy to provide additional death benefit coverage on the life insured. The FTIO Rider provides flexible term life insurance to attained age 100 with cost of insurance charges less than or equal to those of the policy. The Rider will terminate at the earlier of attained age 100, the date the policy lapses or is surrendered, and your request to cancel the FTIO Rider.
You may schedule the death benefit amounts that will apply at specified times (the “Scheduled Death Benefits”). Scheduled Death Benefits may be constant or varying from time to time. The Death Benefit Schedule will be shown in the policy.
The Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider is equal to (a) minus (b) but not less than zero where:
(a)the Scheduled Death Benefit for the policy month, and
(b)the Face Amount of the policy or, if greater, the policy’s Minimum Death Benefit
Even if the Term Insurance Benefit may be zero in a policy month, the Rider will not terminate.
Example. A policy is purchased for an executive as part of an employee benefit plan. The death benefit provided by the policy is to be equal to the executive’s salary of $100,000 increasing at 5% per year through age 64. Assuming the executive is currently 55, the policy will be issued with a death benefit Schedule as follows:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
1
100,000
2
105,000
3
110,250
4
115,763
5
121,551
6
127,628
7
134,010
8
140,710
9
147,746
10+
155,133
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The FTIO Rider amount will change each year as necessary to provide the benefits shown in the schedule, as follows:
Policy Year
Total
Death
Benefit
Face
Amount
Flexible
Term
Insurance
Amount
1
100,000
100000
0
2
105,000
100000
5,000
3
110,250
100000
10,250
4
115,763
100000
15,763
5
121,551
100000
21,551
6
127,628
100000
27,628
7
134,010
100000
34,010
8
140,710
100000
40,710
9
147,746
100000
47,746
10
155,133
100000
55,133
Death benefit options. You may choose either of two death benefit Options:
Death Benefit Option 1. The death benefit on any date is the Face Amount of the policy or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit, plus the Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider.
Death Benefit Option 2. The death benefit on any date is the Face Amount plus the policy value or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit, plus the Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider.
Changing the death benefit option. You may change the death benefit Option at any time. The change will take effect at the beginning of the next policy month that is at least 30 days after your written request is received at the Service Office. We reserve the right to limit changes that could cause the policy to fail to qualify as life insurance for tax purposes.
A change in the death benefit Option will result in a change in the Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits to avoid any change in the amount of death benefit, as follows:
Change from Option 1 to Option 2. The new Face Amount will be the Face Amount prior to the change less the policy value on the date of the change.
• The Scheduled Death Benefit amounts for dates on or after the date of the change will be the amounts scheduled prior to the change less the policy value on the date of the change.
• Coverage amounts will be reduced or eliminated in the order that they are listed in the policy until the total decrease in coverage amounts equals the decrease in Face Amount.
surrender charge will not be assessed for reductions that are solely due to a change in the death benefit Option.
Example. A policy is issued with a Face amount of $100,000, death benefit Option 1, and the following schedule:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
1
100,000
2
125,000
3
150,000
4
175,000
5+
200,000
The death benefit Option is changed to Option 2 at the beginning of policy year 3. If the policy value at the time of the change is $10,000, then the Face Amount after the change will be $90,000 (the Face Amount prior to the change less the policy value) and the Death Benefit Schedule after the change will become:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
3
140,000
4
165,000
5+
190,000
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Change from Option 2 to Option 1. The new Face Amount will be the Face Amount prior to the change plus the policy value on the date of the change (but the new Face Amount will be no greater than the Scheduled Death Benefit on the date of the change.)
The resulting Face Amount increase will be added to the first coverage amount listed in the policy.
The Annual Premium Target for this coverage amount will not be increased and new surrender charge or sales loads will not apply, however, for an increase solely due to a change in the death benefit Option.
Example. A policy is issued with a Face amount of $100,000, death benefit Option 2, and the following schedule:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
1
100,000
2
125,000
3
150,000
4
175,000
5+
200,000
The death benefit Option is changed to Option 1 at the beginning of policy year 3. If the policy value at the time of the change is $10,000, then the Face Amount after the change will be $110,000 (the Face Amount prior to the change plus the policy value), and the Death Benefit Schedule after the change will become:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
3
160,000
4
185,000
5+
210,000
Changing the Face Amount and scheduled death benefits. At any time, you may request an increase or decrease to the Face Amount or any Scheduled Death Benefits effective on or after the date of change. We reserve the right to limit changes that could cause the policy to fail to qualify as life insurance for tax purposes.
• Increases in Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits.
• Increases in Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits are subject to the following conditions:
• Increases in Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits will require satisfactory evidence of the life insured’s insurability.
• Increases will take effect at the beginning of the next policy month after we approve the request.
• We may refuse a requested increase that would not meet our requirements for new policy issues at the time due to the life insured’s attained age or other factors.
• If the Face Amount is increased (other than as required by a death benefit Option change) then all Scheduled Death Benefits effective on or after the date of the change will be increased by the amount of the Face Amount increase.
Coverage amounts equal to the amount of the increase will be added to the policy as follows:
• First, coverage amounts that were reduced or eliminated by a prior Face Amount decrease will be restored.
• Second, if needed, a new coverage amount will be added to the policy with an Annual Premium Target and new surrender charge or sales loads. Any new coverage amount will be based on the life insured’s attained age and other relevant factors on the effective date of the increase.
Premiums paid on or after the increase may be attributed to the new coverage amount and result in surrender charge or sales loads (see “Charges and DeductionsAttribution of Premiums”).
Decreases in Face Amount and scheduled death benefits. Decreases in Face Amount and scheduled death benefits are subject to the following conditions:
• Decreases in Face Amount and scheduled death benefits will take effect at the beginning of the next policy Month which is at least 30 days after your written request is received at the Service Office.
20

• If the Face Amount is decreased then all scheduled death benefits effective on or after the date of the change will be decreased by the same amount.
• If at any time the scheduled death benefit decreases to less than the Face Amount, the Face Amount will be decreased to be equal to the scheduled death benefit at that time.
• Coverage amounts equal to the amount of the Face Amount decrease will be reduced or eliminated in the reverse order that they are listed in the policy. surrender charge may be assessed (see “Charges and DeductionsDeductions from Premium Payments”).
Decreases in Face Amount under death benefit Option 1 due to a partial withdrawal.
If death benefit Option 1 is in effect when a partial withdrawal is made, the Face Amount will be decreased by an amount equal to (a) minus (b) but not less than zero, where:
• (a) is the partial withdrawal amount plus any applicable surrender charge and
• (b) is the excess, if any, of the policy’s Minimum Death Benefit over its Face Amount, immediately prior to the partial withdrawal.
Decreases in Face Amount under death benefit Option 1 due to a Partial Withdrawal are subject to the following conditions:
Coverage amounts equal to the amount of the Face Amount decrease will be reduced or eliminated in the reverse order that they are listed in the policy.
All Scheduled Death Benefits effective on or after the date of the partial withdrawal will be decreased by the amount of the Face Amount decrease, unless you request otherwise and we approve.
A Face Amount decrease due to a partial withdrawal will not incur any surrender charge in addition to that applicable to the partial withdrawal (see “Charges and DeductionsDeductions from premium payments”).
Example for Face Increases and Decreases. A policy is issued with a Face Amount of $100,000, death benefit Option 1, and a Death Benefit Schedule as follows:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
1
100,000
2
125,000
3
150,000
4
175,000
5+
200,000
Assume the following policy activity:
Activity
Effect on Policy
Change in Benefit Schedule
In policy year 2, the Face
Amount is reduced to
$80,000.
The initial Coverage amount is
reduced to $80,000.
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
2
105,000
3
130,000
4
155,000
5+
180,000
21

Activity
Effect on Policy
Change in Benefit Schedule
In policy year 3, the Face
Amount is increased to
$120,000
The initial coverage amount
(which earlier was reduced to
$80,000) is restored to its
original level of $100,000. A new
coverage amount for $20,000 is
added to the policy. This new
coverage amount will have its
own Annual Premium Target, and
if applicable, its own sales load
or surrender charge. A portion of
the future premiums paid will be
attributed to this coverage
amount to determine the amount
of the sales load or surrender
charge.
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
3
170,000
4
195,000
5+
220,000
In policy year 4, a
Partial Withdrawal of
$30,000 is made.
The Face Amount is reduced to
$90,000. The most recent
coverage amount of $20,000 is
reduced to $0, and the initial
coverage amount is reduced to
$90,000.
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
4
165,000
5
190,000
Factors that affect the death benefit. In the case of death benefit Option 2 where the death benefit is the Face Amount plus the policy value, changes in the policy value will affect the amount of death benefit. Factors that affect the policy value are the investment performance of the variable investment accounts chosen and the charges deducted. For a discussion of how these factors affect policy value see the “Risks/Benefits Summary.” These factors do not affect the Face Amount of the policy. Therefore, the amount of death benefit under Option 1 will not be less than the Face Amount as long as the policy does not lapse.
22

Surrenders and Withdrawals
Surrender and Withdrawal
A policy may be surrendered for its net cash surrender value at any time while the life insured is living. The net cash surrender value is equal to the policy value less any surrender charge, monthly deductions due and Policy Debt. The net cash surrender value will be determined at the end of the Business Day on which we receive the policy and a written request for surrender at the Service Office.
When a policy is surrendered, the insurance coverage and all other benefits under the policy will terminate. You may make a partial withdrawal of the net cash surrender value at any time.
Additional Information Regarding Surrender and Withdrawal
You may designate how the withdrawal amount is allocated among the investment account and the fixed account. If you give no instructions, the withdrawal amount will be allocated among the accounts in the same proportion as the policy value in each account bears to the net policy value.
Surrender charges may be assessed on a partial withdrawal. See “Charges and DeductionsDeductions from premium payments.” The death benefit may be reduced as a result of a partial withdrawal.
23

Loans
Availability of Loans, Limitations and Interest
At any time while the policy is in force, you may borrow against the policy value. The policy is the only security for the loan. policy loans may have tax consequences. See “TAXES – Policy Loans.”
A policy loan will affect future policy values, since the portion of the policy value in the Loan Account will receive the loan interest credited rate rather than varying with the performance of the underlying portfolios or increasing at the fixed account interest credited rate. A policy loan may cause a policy to be more susceptible to lapse since it reduces the net cash surrender value from which monthly deductions are taken. A policy loan causes the amount payable upon death of the life insured to be reduced by the amount of outstanding Policy Debt.
The amount of any loan cannot exceed the amount that would cause the Policy Debt to equal the Policy’s Cash Surrender Value less the monthly deductions due from the date of the loan to the next policy anniversary.
Interest on the Policy Debt will accrue daily and be payable annually on the policy anniversary. The rate of interest charged will be an effective annual rate of 4%.
When a loan is made, an amount equal to the loan will be deducted from the investment accounts or the fixed account and transferred to the Loan Account. You may designate how this amount is allocated among the Accounts. If you give no instructions, the amount transferred will be allocated among the investment accounts and the fixed account in the same proportion as the policy value in each investment account and the fixed account bears to the net policy value. A transfer from an investment account will result in the cancellation of units of the underlying sub-account equal in value to the amount transferred from the investment account. However, since the Loan Account is part of the policy value, transfers made in connection with a loan will not change the policy value.
Policy value in the Loan Account will earn interest at an effective annual rate guaranteed to be at least 3.25%. We may declare a current interest rate that is greater than this, subject to change at any time. The excess of the loan interest charged rate (4%) over the loan interest credited rates will result in a net charge against the policy value with respect to any Policy Debt.
Currently we credit loan interest rates which vary by policy year as follows:
Policy Years
Current Loan
Interest
Credited Rates
Excess of Loan
Interest
Charged Rate
1-10
3.25%
0.75%
11+
3.75%
0.25%
On the first day of each policy month the difference between the Loan Account and the Policy Debt is transferred to the Loan Account from the investment accounts or the fixed account. The amount transferred will be allocated to the investment accounts and the fixed account in the same proportion as the policy value in each investment account or the fixed account bears to the net policy value.
Loan Repayments
Policy Debt may be repaid, in whole or in part, at any time prior to the death of the life insured while the policy is in force. A loan repayment amount will be credited to the Loan Account and transferred to the fixed account or the investment accounts in the same proportion as the policy value in each Account bears to the net policy value. Amounts paid to us not specifically designated in writing as loan repayments will be treated as premiums.
24

Other Benefits Available Under the Policy
In addition to the standard death benefits associated with your policy, other standard and/or optional benefits may also be available to you. The following tables summarize information about those benefits. Information about the fees associated with each benefit included in the tables may be found in the FEE TABLE.
STANDARD BENEFITS
Name of Benefit
Purpose
Brief Description of
Restrictions/Limitations
Dollar cost averaging
Under the dollar cost averaging program, you will
designate an amount that will be transferred
monthly from one variable investment account into
any other variable investment account or a fixed
account.
We reserve the right to cease to offer this program
after written notice to you.
Asset allocation balancing
Under the asset allocation balancer program, you
will designate a percentage allocation of policy
value among variable investment accounts. We will
automatically transfer amounts among the variable
investment accounts at intervals you select
(annually, semi-annually, quarterly, or monthly) to
reestablish your chosen allocation.
We reserve the right to cease this program after
written notice to you.
OPTIONAL BENEFITS
Name of Benefit
Purpose
Brief Description of
Restrictions/Limitations
Flexible Term Insurance
Option Rider
You may add the FTIO Rider to the policy to
provide additional death benefit coverage on the
life insured. The FTIO Rider provides flexible term
life insurance to attained age 100 with cost of
insurance charges less than or equal to those of the
policy.
The Rider will terminate at the earlier of attained
age 100, the date the policy lapses or is
surrendered, and your request to cancel the FTIO
Rider.
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More About Certain Optional Benefits
When you apply for a policy, you can request any of the optional supplementary benefit riders that we then make available. Availability of any rider, the benefits it provides and the charges for it may vary by state. Our rules and procedures will govern eligibility for any rider and, in some cases, the configuration of the actual rider benefits. Each rider contains specific details that you should review before you decide to choose the rider. You may request an example illustrating the operation of any of the following optional supplementary benefit riders by contacting the Service Office at 1-800-732-5543. Charges for most riders will be deducted from the policy value. We may change these charges (or the rates that determine them), but not above any applicable maximum amount stated in your policy specifications. We may add to, delete from or modify the list of optional supplementary benefit riders.
Flexible Term Insurance Option Rider. You may add the FTIO Rider to the policy to provide additional death benefit coverage on the life insured. The FTIO Rider provides flexible term life insurance to attained age 100 with cost of insurance charges less than or equal to those of the policy. The Rider will terminate at the earlier of attained age 100, the date the policy lapses or is surrendered, and your request to cancel the FTIO Rider.
You may schedule the death benefit amounts that will apply at specified times (the “Scheduled Death Benefits”). Scheduled Death Benefits may be constant or varying from time to time. The Death Benefit Schedule will be shown in the policy.
The Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider is equal to (a) minus (b) but not less than zero where:
(a) the Scheduled Death Benefit for the policy month, and
(b) the Face Amount of the policy or, if greater, the policy’s Minimum Death Benefit
Even if the Term Insurance Benefit may be zero in a policy month, the Rider will not terminate. Example. A policy is purchased for an executive as part of an employee benefit plan. The death benefit provided by the policy is to be equal to the executive’s salary of $100,000 increasing at 5% per year through age 64. Assuming the executive is currently 55, the policy will be issued with a death benefit Schedule as follows:
Policy Year
Scheduled
Death
Benefit
1
100,000
2
105,000
3
110,250
4
115,763
5
121,551
6
127,628
7
134,010
8
140,710
9
147,746
10+
155,133
The FTIO Rider amount will change each year as necessary to provide the benefits shown in the schedule, as follows:
Policy Year
Total
Death
Benefit
Face
Amount
Flexible
Term
Insurance
Amount
1
100,000
100000
0
2
105,000
100000
5,000
3
110,250
100000
10,250
4
115,763
100000
15,763
5
121,551
100000
21,551
6
127,628
100000
27,628
7
134,010
100000
34,010
8
140,710
100000
40,710
9
147,746
100000
47,746
10
155,133
100000
55,133
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Taxes
This description of Federal income tax consequences is only a brief summary and is neither exhaustive nor authoritative. It was written to support the promotion of our products. It does not constitute legal or tax advice, and it is not intended to be used and cannot be used to avoid any penalties that may be imposed on you. Tax consequences will vary based on your own particular circumstances, and for further information you should consult a qualified tax adviser. Federal, state and local tax laws, regulations and interpretations can change from time to time. As a result, the tax consequences to you and the beneficiary may be altered, in some cases retroactively. The policy may be used in various arrangements, including non-qualified deferred compensation or salary continuation plans, split dollar insurance plans, executive bonus plans, retiree medical benefit plans and others. The tax consequences of such plans may vary depending on the particular facts and circumstances of each individual arrangement. Therefore, if the value of using the policy in any such arrangement depends in part on the tax consequences, a qualified tax adviser should be consulted for advice.
General
We are taxed as a life insurance company. Under current tax law rules, we include the investment income (exclusive of capital gains) of the Separate Account in our taxable income and take deductions for investment income credited to our policy holder reserves. We are also required to capitalize and amortize certain costs instead of deducting those costs when they are incurred. We do not currently charge the Separate Account for any resulting income tax costs, other than a charge we may impose against the Separate Account to compensate us for the cost of a delay in the deductibility of deferred acquisition costs (the “DAC tax” adjustment) pursuant to section 848 of the Internal Revenue Code. We also claim certain tax credits or deductions relating to foreign taxes paid and dividends received by the series funds. These benefits can be material. We do not pass these benefits through to the Separate Account, principally because: (i) the deductions and credits are allowed to us and not the policy owners under applicable tax law; and (ii) the deductions and credits do not represent investment return on the Separate Account assets that is passed through to policy owners. The policies permit us to deduct a charge for any taxes we incur that are attributable to the operation or existence of the policies or the Separate Account. Currently, we do not anticipate making any specific charge for such taxes other than any DAC tax charge and premium taxes where applicable. If the level of the current taxes increases, however, or is expected to increase in the future, we reserve the right to make a charge in the future.
Death Benefit Proceeds and Other Policy Distributions
Generally, death benefits paid under policies such as yours are not subject to income tax unless policy ownership has been transferred in exchange for payment. Earnings on your policy value are ordinarily not subject to income tax as long as we don’t pay them out to you. If we do pay out any amount of your policy value upon surrender or partial withdrawal, all or part of that distribution would generally be treated as a return of the premiums you’ve paid and not subjected to income tax. Any portion not treated as a return of your premiums would be includible in your income.
Please note that certain distributions associated with a reduction in death benefit or other policy benefits within the first fifteen years after issuance of the policy are ordinarily taxable in whole or in part. Amounts you borrow are generally not taxable to you.
However, some of the tax rules change if your policy becomes a modified endowment contract. This can happen if you’ve paid premiums in excess of limits prescribed by the tax laws. In that case, additional taxes and penalties may be payable for policy distributions of any kind, including loans. (See “7-pay Premium Limit and Modified Endowment Contract Status” below.)
We expect the policy to receive the same Federal income and estate tax treatment as fixed benefit life insurance policies. Section 7702 of the Internal Revenue Code defines a life insurance contract for Federal tax purposes. For a policy to be treated as a life insurance contract, it must satisfy either the cash value accumulation test or the guideline premium test. These tests limit the amount of premium that you may pay into the policy. We will monitor compliance with these standards. If we determine that a policy does not satisfy section 7702, we may take whatever steps are appropriate and reasonable to bring it into compliance with section 7702.
If the policy complies with section 7702, the death benefit proceeds under the policy ordinarily should be excludible from the beneficiary’s gross income under section 101 of the Internal Revenue Code. (As noted above, a transfer of the policy for valuable consideration may limit the exclusion of death benefits from the beneficiary’s income.)
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Increases in policy value as a result of interest or investment experience will not be subject to Federal income tax unless and until values are received through actual or deemed distributions. In general, unless the policy is a modified endowment contract, the owner will be taxed only on the amount of distributions that exceed the premiums paid under the policy. An exception to this general rule occurs in the case of a decrease in the policy’s death benefit or any other change that reduces benefits under the policy in the first fifteen years after the policy is issued and that results in a cash distribution to the policy owner. Changes that reduce benefits include partial withdrawals, death benefit option changes, and distributions required to keep the policy in compliance with section 7702. For purposes of this rule any distribution within the two years immediately before a reduction in benefits will also be treated as if it were a result of the reduction. A cash distribution that reduces policy benefits will be taxed in whole or in part (to the extent of any gain in the policy) under rules prescribed in section 7702. The taxable amount is subject to limits prescribed in section 7702(f)(7). Any taxable distribution will be ordinary income to the owner (rather than capital gain).
Distributions for tax purposes include amounts received upon surrender or partial withdrawals, and may include the charges for certain supplementary benefit riders. You may also be deemed to have received a distribution for tax purposes if you assign all or part of your policy rights or change your policy’s ownership.
It is possible that, despite our monitoring, a policy might fail to qualify as a life insurance contract under the Internal Revenue Code. This could happen, for example, if we inadvertently failed to return to you any premium payments that were in excess of amounts permitted under section 7702, or if any of the funds failed to meet certain investment diversification or other requirements of the Internal Revenue Code. If this were to occur, you would be subject to income tax on the income credited to the policy from the date of issue to the date of the disqualification and for subsequent periods.
Tax consequences of ownership or receipt of policy proceeds under Federal, state and local estate, inheritance, gift and other tax laws will depend on the circumstances of each owner or beneficiary. If the person insured by the policy is also its owner, either directly or indirectly through an entity such as a revocable trust, the death benefit will be includible in his or her estate for purposes of the Federal estate tax. If the owner is not the person insured, the value of the policy will be includible in the owner’s estate upon his or her death. Even if ownership has been transferred, the death proceeds or the policy value may be includible in the former owner’s estate if the transfer occurred less than three years before the former owner’s death or if the former owner retained certain kinds of control over the policy. You should consult your tax adviser regarding these possible tax consequences.
Because there may be unfavorable tax consequences (including recognition of taxable income and the loss of income tax-free treatment for any death benefit payable to the beneficiary), you should consult a qualified tax adviser prior to changing the policy’s ownership or making any assignment of ownership interests.
Policy Loans
We expect that, except as noted below (see “7-pay Premium Limit and Modified Endowment Contract Status”), loans received under the policy will be treated as indebtedness of an owner and that no part of any loan will constitute income to the owner. However, if the policy terminates for any reason other than the payment of the death benefit, an amount equal to any outstanding loan that was not previously considered income will be treated as if it had been distributed to the owner upon such termination. This could result in a considerable tax bill. Under certain circumstances involving large amounts of outstanding loans, you might find yourself having to choose between high premiums required to keep your policy from lapsing and a significant tax burden if you allow the lapse to occur.
Diversification Rules and Ownership of the Separate Account
Your policy will not qualify for the tax benefits of a life insurance contract unless the Separate Account follows certain rules requiring diversification of investments underlying the policy. In addition, the rules require that the policy owner not have “investor control” over the underlying assets.
In certain circumstances, the owner of a variable life insurance policy may be considered the owner, for Federal income tax purposes, of the assets of the Separate Account used to support the policy. In those circumstances, income and gains from the Separate Account assets would be includible in the policy owner’s gross income. The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) has stated in published rulings that a variable policy owner will be considered the owner of Separate Account assets if the policy owner possesses incidents of ownership in those assets, such as the ability to exercise investment control over the assets. A Treasury Decision issued in 1986 (T.D.8101) stated that guidance would be issued in the form of regulations or rulings on “the extent to which policyholders may direct their investments to particular sub-accounts of a Separate Account without being
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treated as owners of the underlying assets.” As of the date of this prospectus, no comprehensive guidance on this point has been issued. In Rev. Rul. 2003-91, however, the IRS ruled that a contract holder would not be treated as the owner of assets underlying a variable life insurance or annuity contract despite the owner’s ability to allocate funds among as many as twenty subaccounts.
The ownership rights under your policy are similar to, but different in certain respects from, those described in IRS rulings in which it was determined that policyholders were not owners of Separate Account assets. Since you have greater flexibility in allocating premiums and policy values than was the case in those rulings, it is possible that you would be treated as the owner of your policy’s proportionate share of the assets of the Separate Account.
We do not know what future Treasury Department regulations or other guidance may require. We cannot guarantee that the funds will be able to operate as currently described in the series funds’ prospectuses, or that a series fund will not have to change any fund’s investment objectives or policies. We have reserved the right to modify your policy if we believe doing so will prevent you from being considered the owner of your policy’s proportionate share of the assets of the Separate Account, but we are under no obligation to do so.
7-pay Premium Limit and Modified Endowment Contract Status
At the time of policy issuance, we will determine whether the Planned Premium schedule will exceed the 7-pay limit discussed below. If so, our standard procedures prohibit issuance of the policy unless you sign a form acknowledging that fact.
The 7-pay limit at any time during the first seven contract years is the total of net level premiums that would have been payable at or before that time under a comparable fixed policy that would be fully “paid-up” after the payment of seven equal annual premiums. “Paid-up” means that no further premiums would be required to continue the coverage in force until maturity, based on certain prescribed assumptions. If the total premiums paid at any time during the first seven policy years exceed the 7-pay limit, the policy will be treated as a modified endowment contract, which can have adverse tax consequences.
Policies classified as modified endowment contracts are subject to the following tax rules:
First, all withdrawals from such a policy are treated as ordinary income subject to tax up to the amount equal to the excess (if any) of the policy value immediately before the withdrawal over the investment in the policy at such time. If you own any other modified endowment contracts issued to you in the same calendar year by the same insurance company or its affiliates, their values will be combined with the value of the policy from which you take the withdrawal for purposes of determining how much of the withdrawal is taxable as ordinary income.
Second, loans taken from or secured by such a policy and assignments or pledges of any part of its value are treated as partial withdrawals from the policy and taxed accordingly. Past-due loan interest that is added to the loan amount is treated as an additional loan.
Third, a 10% additional penalty tax is imposed on the portion of any distribution (including distributions on surrender) from, or loan taken from or secured by, such a policy that is included in income except where the distribution or loan:
• is made on or after the date on which the policy owner attains age 59½ or
• is attributable to the policy owner becoming disabled.
These exceptions to the 10% additional tax do not apply in situations where the policy is not owned by an individual.
Furthermore, any time there is a “material change” in a policy, the policy will begin a new 7-pay testing period as if it were a newly- issued policy. The material change rules for determining whether a policy is a modified endowment contract are complex. In general, however, the determination of whether a policy will be a modified endowment contract after a material change depends upon the relationship among the death benefit of the policy at the time of such change, the policy value at the time of the change, and the additional premiums paid into the policy during the seven years starting with the date on which the material change occurs.
Moreover, under a policy insuring a single life, if there is a reduction in benefits (such as a reduction in the death benefit or the reduction or cancellation of certain rider benefits) during a 7-pay testing period, the 7-pay limit will generally be recalculated based on the reduced benefits and the policy will be re-tested from the beginning of the 7-pay testing period using the lower limit. If the premiums paid to date at any point during the 7-pay testing period are greater than the recalculated
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7-pay limit, the policy will become a modified endowment contract. If your policy is a survivorship policy, a reduction in benefits under the policy at any time will require re-testing. For such a policy the 7-pay limit will generally be recalculated based on the reduced benefits and the policy will be re-tested, using the lower limit, from the date it was issued. You should consult your tax adviser if you have questions regarding the possible impact of the 7-pay limit on your policy.
If your policy is issued as a result of an exchange subject to section 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code, it may be considered to be a modified endowment contract if the death benefit under the new policy is smaller than the death benefit under the exchanged policy, or if you reduce coverage in your new policy after it is issued. Therefore, if you desire to reduce the face amount as part of a 1035 exchange, a qualified tax adviser should be consulted for advice. A new policy issued in exchange for a modified endowment contract will also be a modified endowment contract regardless of any change in the death benefit.
All modified endowment contracts issued by the same insurer (or its affiliates) to the same owner during any calendar year generally are required to be treated as one contract for the purpose of applying the rules on taxation of withdrawals from modified endowment contracts. You should consult your tax adviser if you have questions regarding the possible impact of the 7-pay limit on your policy.
Corporate and H.R. 10 Retirement Plans
The policy may be acquired in connection with the funding of retirement plans satisfying the qualification requirements of section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code. If so, the Internal Revenue Code provisions relating to such plans and life insurance benefits thereunder should be carefully scrutinized. We are not responsible for compliance with the terms of any such plan or with the requirements of applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.
Withholding
To the extent that policy distributions to you are taxable, they are generally subject to withholding for your Federal income tax liability. However if you reside in the United States, you can generally choose not to have tax withheld from distributions. Electing to have no withholding will not reduce your tax liability and may expose you to penalties under the rules governing payment of estimated taxes.
Life Insurance Purchases by Residents of Puerto Rico
In Rev. Rul. 2004-75, 2004-31 I.R.B. 109, the Internal Revenue Service ruled that income received by residents of Puerto Rico under a life insurance policy issued by a United States company is U.S.-source income that is subject to United States Federal income tax.
Life Insurance Purchases by Non-resident Aliens
If you are not a U.S. citizen, U.S. resident alien or other U.S. person, you will generally be subject to U.S. Federal withholding tax on taxable distributions from life insurance policies at a 30% rate, unless a lower treaty rate applies. In addition, you may be subject to state and/or municipal taxes and taxes imposed by your country of citizenship or residence. You should consult with a qualified tax adviser before purchasing a policy.
Life Insurance Owned by Citizens or Residents Living Abroad
If you are a U.S. citizen or permanent resident living outside the United States, you are still subject to income taxation by the United States. Since many countries tax on the basis of domicile, you may also be subject to tax in the country or territory in which you are living. The tax-deferred accumulation of gain that a life insurance policy provides under United States tax law may not be available under the tax laws of the country in which you are living. If you are living outside the United States or planning to do so, you should consult with a qualified tax adviser before purchasing or retaining ownership of a policy. If your policy is issued as a result of an exchange of a policy owned or issued outside the United States, the country or territory in which you reside may still tax you on the surrender of the policy replaced through the exchange. You should consult with a qualified tax adviser before exchanging your policy issued outside of the United States for one issued within the United States.
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Principal Risks of Investing in the Policy
Lapse Risk
If the net cash surrender value is insufficient to pay the charges when due your policy can terminate (i.e., “lapse”). For example, this can happen because you haven’t paid enough premium, because the performance of the variable investment or general account options you’ve chosen has been poor, or because of a combination of all factors. Since withdrawals and policy charges reduce your policy value, these also increase the risk of lapse. Policy loans also increase the risk of lapse. There is no guarantee that your policy will not lapse even if you pay your planned premium.
Investment Risk/Risk of Loss
The policy offers a number of variable investment accounts, as listed in the APPENDIX. The investment performance of any variable investment account may be good or bad, and you may lose money on amounts you invest in a policy. Your policy value will increase or decrease based on the investment performance of the variable investment accounts you’ve chosen. The variable investment accounts cover a broad spectrum of investment styles and strategies, some variable investment accounts are riskier than others. These risks (and potential rewards) are discussed in detail in the prospectuses of the portfolios. The death benefit may also increase or decrease with investment experience.
An investment in a policy is also subject to risks related to John Hancock USA, including that the obligations (including under the fixed account option), guarantees, or benefits are subject to the claims-paying ability of John Hancock USA. Information about John Hancock USA, including its financial strength ratings, is available upon request from your John Hancock USA representative. Our current financial strength ratings can also be obtained by contacting the Service Office at 1-800-732-5543.
Transfer Risk
There is a risk that you will not be able to transfer your policy value from one variable investment account to another because of limitations on the dollar amount or frequency of transfers you can make. The limitations on transfers out of the fixed account are more restrictive than those that apply to transfers out of variable investment accounts. If you purchase certain supplementary benefit riders you will be subject to special transfer restrictions.
To discourage market timing and disruptive trading activity, we impose restrictions on transfers and reserve the right to change, suspend or terminate telephone, facsimile and internet transaction privileges. While we seek to identify and prevent disruptive trading activity, it may not always be possible to do so. Therefore, no assurance can be given that the restrictions we impose will be successful in preventing all disruptive trading and avoiding harm to long term investors.
Early Surrender or Withdrawal Risk/ Not a Short-Term Investment
This policy is not a short-term investment and is not appropriate for an investor who needs ready access to cash. Depending on the policy value at the time you are considering surrender, there may be little or no surrender value payable to you.
Tax Risks
In order for you to receive the tax benefits extended to life insurance under the Code, your policy must comply with certain requirements of the Code. We will monitor your policy for compliance with these requirements, but a policy might fail to qualify as life insurance in spite of our monitoring, which can have adverse tax consequences. If the policy were determined not to qualify as life insurance under the Code, you would be taxed on any income or gains those assets generate. In other words, you would lose the value of the so-called “tax-deferred inside build-up” that is a major benefit of life insurance.
There is a tax risk associated with policy loans. Although no part of a loan is treated as income to you when the loan is made unless your policy is a “modified endowment contract,” surrender or lapse of the policy with a loan outstanding would result in the loan being treated as a distribution at the time of lapse or surrender. This could result in a considerable tax bill. Under certain circumstances involving large amounts of outstanding loans and an insured person of advanced age, you might find yourself having to choose between high premium requirements to keep your policy from lapsing and a significant tax burden if you allow the lapse to occur.
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Tax consequences of ownership or receipt of policy proceeds (including surrender or withdrawal proceeds) under Federal, state and local estate, inheritance, gift and other tax laws can vary greatly depending upon the circumstances of each owner or beneficiary. There can also be unfavorable tax consequences on such things as the change of policy ownership or assignment of ownership interests. For these and all the other reasons mentioned above, we recommend you consult with a qualified tax adviser before buying the policy and before exercising certain rights under the policy.
Cybersecurity Risks
Our business and operations are highly dependent upon the effective operation of our computer systems and those of our third-party business partners. As a result, there are potential operational and information security risks associated with attack, damage, or unauthorized access to the technologies and systems on which our business depends. These risks include, among other things, the unauthorized access, theft, loss, misuse, corruption, and destruction of data maintained online or digitally, denial of service on websites and other operational disruption, and unauthorized release of confidential customer information. Cyber-attacks affecting us, any third-party administrator, the underlying portfolios, intermediaries, and other affiliated or third-party service providers may adversely affect us and your policy value. For instance, cyber-attacks may interfere with the processing of actions taken on your policy, including the processing of transactions and orders from our website or with the underlying portfolios, impact our ability to calculate unit values or an underlying portfolio to calculate a net asset value, or cause the release and possible destruction of confidential customer or business information. Cybersecurity risks may also impact the issuers of securities in which the underlying portfolios invest, which may cause the portfolios underlying your policy to lose value. While measures have been implemented that are designed to reduce cybersecurity risks, there can be no guarantee or assurance that we, the underlying portfolios, or our service providers will not suffer losses affecting your policy due to cyber-attacks or information security breaches in the future.
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Additional Information Regarding the Policy
Charges and Deductions
Under the policies, we deduct the charges discussed immediately below under “Deductions from premium payments” and “Deductions from policy value.” Although the Fee Table in this prospectus provides disclosure about the maximum rates we are permitted to charge, we currently deduct some of the charges at less than those maximum rates. As a general matter, however, we also are permitted to increase or decrease the rate at which we are deducting any charge, provided that the rate can never exceed the maximum set forth in your policy (including in any applicable supplementary benefit rider) and as disclosed in the Fee Table. By contacting the John Hancock USA Service Office or your John Hancock USA representative at any time, you can obtain information about the then-current rate of any charges that are applicable to your particular circumstances and/or obtain a personalized illustration that will demonstrate the manner in which those specific current charges impact the values under your policy.
Deductions from premium payments.
Premium load – We will deduct a Premium Load as a percentage of each premium payment that is guaranteed never to exceed 2.0%. Currently, we waive this load in policy years 11 and later and charge 0%. The charge is intended to cover a portion of the aggregate amount of various taxes and fees we pay to federal, state and local governments. It is not based on the actual premium tax rate of your state of residence or any other specific tax.
Sales Load or Surrender Charge – Each coverage amount listed in the policy is designated as having either a sales load or surrender charge. One or the other of these charges will apply to a coverage amount, but not both. This designation cannot be changed after a coverage amount is effective and, currently, the same alternative must apply to all coverage amounts.
Generally, policy benefits will be approximately equal in present value under either alternative. However, there is no guarantee each alternative will perform the same in all circumstances. Therefore, you should obtain individualized illustrations for both charge structures. Current cost of insurance rates in early policy years will be higher for the surrender charge alternative.
The sales load or surrender charge is intended to cover a portion of our costs of marketing and distributing the policies.
Attribution of Premiums – An Annual Premium Target is associated with each coverage amount. Annual Premium Targets are based on the coverage amount and the life insured’s attained age, sex and smoking status on the effective date of the coverage amount. The Annual Premium Targets are listed with the coverage amounts in the policy.
Premium payments will be attributed to coverage amounts that have been in effect for less than 5 years. Attribution will begin with the first applicable coverage amount that is listed in the policy. The sum of all premium amounts attributed to a coverage amount in a coverage year is limited to the Annual Premium Target shown in the policy. Premium amounts that exceed the Annual Premium Target will be attributed to the next listed coverage amount, up to its own Annual Premium Target. Attribution will continue in this manner until either the entire premium is attributed to coverage amounts or the Annual Premium Target is exceeded for all applicable coverage amounts.
Sales load. We deduct a sales load from all premium amounts attributed to a coverage amount designated as having a sales load. The sales load is a percentage of premiums guaranteed never to exceed the percentages below.
Currently we are charging these percentages.
Coverage Year
Percentage
Coverage Year
Percentage
1
8%
4
2%
2
6%
5
1%
3
3%
6+
0%
Surrender charge. We will deduct a surrender charge from the net policy value upon elimination or reduction of a coverage amount designated as having a surrender charge during the first 9 coverage years. Coverage amounts may be eliminated or reduced and a surrender charge assessed due to:
• surrender of the policy for its net cash surrender value,
• a partial withdrawal which exceeds the Free Partial Withdrawal Amount,
• a Face Amount decrease that is not solely due to a death benefit Option change, or
33

• lapse of the policy.
The surrender charge for an applicable coverage amount is a percentage of the sum of all premiums attributed to it since its effective date. Surrender charge percentages are guaranteed never to exceed those below. Currently, we are charging these percentages:
Coverage Year
Percentage
Coverage
Year
Percentage
1
5.0%
6
1.5%
2
4.0%
7
1.0%
3
3.0%
8
1.0%
4
2.5%
9
0.5%
5
2.0%
10+
0.0%
Although the surrender charge percentages remain level or decrease as the coverage year increases, the total dollar amount of surrender charge may increase, as the total premium paid increases. Premiums paid in any coverage year in excess of the Annual Premium Target and premiums paid after the fifth coverage year may not add to the surrender charge, so the timing of premium payments may affect the amount of the surrender charge.
Deductions from policy value.
Administration charge – A monthly charge to help cover our administrative costs. This is a flat dollar charge of $12. This charge is intended to cover certain administrative expenses associated with the policy, including maintaining policy records, collecting premiums and processing death claims, surrender and withdrawal requests and various changes permitted under a policy.
Cost of insurance charge – A monthly charge for the cost of insurance is paid to the Company and is determined by multiplying a cost of insurance rate by the net amount at risk at the beginning of each policy month.
Death Benefit Option 1. The net amount at risk is equal to the greater of zero, or (a) minus (b), where
(a) is the applicable death benefit amount on the first day of the policy month, divided by 1.0024663; and
(b) is the Policy Value attributed to that death benefit amount on the first day of the policy month.
Death Benefit Option 2. The net amount at risk is equal to the Face Amount of insurance.
Cost of insurance rates and net amounts at risk are determined separately for each coverage amount and for the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount (the Face Amount is the sum of the coverage amounts).
Attribution of policy value to net amounts at risk- To determine the net amounts at risk, the policy value will be attributed to coverage amounts in the order listed in the policy. The amount of policy value attributed to a coverage amount will be limited to the amount that results in zero net amount at risk, and any excess policy value will then be attributed to the next listed coverage amount. Attribution will continue in this manner until either the entire policy value is attributed or the end of the list of coverage amounts is reached. Any remaining policy value will then be attributed to the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount.
Cost of insurance rates – Cost of insurance rates are determined separately for each coverage amount and the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount. There are different current cost of insurance rate bases for:
• Coverage amounts having sales loads,
• Coverage amounts having surrender charge, and
• The excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount, including any Term Insurance Benefit under the FTIO Rider.
The cost of insurance rate in a specific policy month for an applicable death benefit amount will depend on:
• the cost of insurance rate basis for the applicable death benefit amount,
• the life insured’s attained age, sex (unless unisex rates are required by law) and smoking status on the effective date of the applicable death benefit amount,
• the underwriting class of the applicable death benefit amount,
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• the coverage year, or policy year for the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount,
• any extra charges for substandard ratings, as stated in the policy.
Since the net amount at risk for death benefit Option 1 is based on a formula that includes as factors the policy value, the net amount at risk is affected by the investment performance of the underlying investment options chosen, payment of premiums and charges assessed.
Cost of insurance rates will generally increase with the life insured’s age and the coverage year.
Cost of insurance rates reflect our expectation as to future mortality experience. They are also intended to cover our general costs of providing the policy, to the extent that these costs are not covered by other charges. Current cost of insurance rates may be changed by us on a basis that does not unfairly discriminate within the class of lives insured.
Guaranteed maximum cost of insurance rates. In no event will the cost of insurance rates we charge exceed the guaranteed maximum rates set forth in the policy, except to the extent that an extra charge is imposed for a substandard rating. The guaranteed rates are the based on 1980 Commissioners Standard Ordinary Sex Distinct (unless unisex rates are required by law) ANB Aggregate Ultimate Mortality Tables. Current cost of insurance rates may be less than the guaranteed rates.
Asset-based risk charge – We assess a daily charge against amounts in the investment accounts. This charge is intended to compensate us for insurance risks we assume under the policy, such as benefit payments and expenses that are higher than we expected. We will realize a gain from this charge to the extent it is not needed to provide benefits and pay expenses under the policy.
The charge is a percentage of amounts in the investment accounts, which will reduce Unit Values of the sub-accounts. The charge is guaranteed never to exceed an annual rate of 0.50%. Currently, we charge the following rates:
Policy Year
Annual Rate
1-10
0.50%
11+
0.25%
Supplementary benefit rider charges – A charge for any supplementary insurance benefits added to the policy by means of a rider. Maximum charges for the various riders are shown in the Fee Table above under “Transaction Fees” or “Periodic Charges Other than Annual Portfolio Expenses,” as appropriate. These charges are also specified in the rider’s provisions or the policy specifications. You can obtain information about the specific charges applicable to you from your John Hancock USA representative.
Loan interest charge – We will charge interest on any amount you borrow from your policy. The interest charged on any loan is an effective annual rate of 3.75% in the first ten policy years and 3.00% thereafter. However, we reserve the right to increase the percentage after the tenth policy year to as much as 3.25%.
Transfer fee – We currently do not impose a fee upon transfers of policy value among the variable investment accounts but reserve the right to impose a fee of up to $25.00 for any transfer beyond an annual limit (which will not be less than 12) to compensate us for the costs of processing these transfers.
Charges at the portfolio level. The portfolios must pay investment management fees and other operating expenses from portfolio assets. These fees and expenses are different for each portfolio and reduce the investment return of each portfolio. Therefore, they also indirectly reduce the return you will earn on any variable investment accounts you select. Expenses of the portfolios are not fixed or specified under the terms of the policy, and those expenses may vary from year to year. See APPENDIX.
Additional Information About How Certain Policy Charges Work
The policy is designed for employers and other sponsoring organizations that may purchase multiple policies as a Case. The size or nature of the Case may result in expected savings of sales, underwriting, administrative or other costs. If so, we expect to offer reductions of policy charges and enhancements of surrender value. Eligibility for reductions and enhancements and the amounts available will be determined by a number of factors, including the number of lives to be insured, the total premiums expected to be paid, total assets under management for the policy owner, the nature of the relationship among the lives insured, the purpose for which the policies are being purchased, expected persistency of the individual policies, and any other circumstances which we believe to be relevant to the expected reduction of our expenses. Some of reductions and
35

enhancements may be guaranteed and others may be subject to restrictions or to withdrawal or modification, on a uniform case basis. We may change the nature and amount of reductions and enhancements available from time to time. Reductions and enhancements will be determined in a way that is not unfairly discriminatory to policy owners.
Other Charges We Could Impose in the Future
Currently, we make no specific charge for any federal, state, or local taxes that we incur that may be attributable to such Account or to the policy. We reserve the right in the future to make a charge for any such tax or other economic burden resulting from the application of tax laws that we determines to be attributable to the Separate Account or to the policy.
Commissions Paid to Dealers
We pay compensation to broker-dealers for the promotion and sale of the policies, and for providing ongoing service in relation to policies that have already been purchased. We may also pay a limited number of broker-dealers commissions or overrides to “wholesale” the policies; that is, to provide marketing support and training services to the broker-dealer firms that do the actual selling. The compensation paid is not expected to exceed 15% of target premium paid in the first policy year, 9% of target paid in years 2-5, and 2.5% paid thereafter. Compensation on any premium paid in excess of target premium in any year will not exceed 2.5%. This compensation schedule is exclusive of additional compensation and revenue sharing and inclusive of overrides and expense allowances paid to broker-dealers for sale of the policies (not including riders). Under their own arrangements, broker-dealers determine how much of any amounts received from us is to be paid to their registered representatives.
To the extent permitted by SEC and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”) rules and other applicable laws and regulations, we may enter into special compensation or reimbursement arrangements (“revenue sharing”), either directly or through JH Distributors, with selected broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries. In consideration of these arrangements, a firm may feature our policy in its sales system, give us preferential access to sales staff, or allow JH Distributors or its affiliates to participate in conferences, seminars or other programs attended by the firm’s sales force. We hope to benefit from these revenue sharing and other arrangements through increased sales of our policies.
Selling broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries may receive, directly or indirectly, additional payments in the form of cash, other compensation or reimbursement. These additional compensation or reimbursement arrangements may include, for example, payments in connection with the firm’s “due diligence” examination of the policies, payments for providing conferences or seminars, sales or training programs for invited registered representatives and other employees, payment for travel expenses, including lodging, incurred by registered representatives and other employees for such seminars or training programs, seminars for the public or client seminars, advertising and sales campaigns regarding the policies, payments to assist a firm in connection with its systems, operations and marketing expenses and/or other events or activities sponsored by the firms. We may contribute to, as well as sponsor, various educational programs, sales promotions, and/or other contests in which participating firms and their sales persons may receive gifts and prizes such as merchandise, cash or other rewards as may be permitted under FINRA rules and other applicable laws and regulations.
You should contact your registered representative for more information on compensation arrangements in connection with your purchase of a policy. We provide additional information on special compensation or reimbursement arrangements involving broker- dealers and other financial intermediaries in the Statement of Additional Information (the “SAI”).
Lapse and Reinstatement
Lapse. A policy will go into default if at the beginning of any policy month the policy’s net cash surrender value would be zero or below after deducting the monthly deductions then due. Therefore, a policy could lapse eventually if increases in policy value (prior to deduction of policy charges) are not sufficient to cover policy charges.
Reinstatement. By making a written request, you can reinstate a policy that has gone into default and terminated at any time within the five-year period following the date of termination subject to the following conditions:
(a) You must provide to us evidence of the insured person’s insurability that is satisfactory to us; and
(b) You must pay a premium equal to the amount that was required to bring the policy out of default immediately prior to termination, plus the amount needed to keep the policy in force for at least the next three policy months.
36

If the reinstatement is approved, the date of reinstatement will be the later of the date we approve your request or the date the required payment is received at our Service Office. In addition, any surrender charges will be reinstated to the amount they were at the date of default. The policy value on the date of reinstatement, prior to the crediting of any net premium paid in connection with the reinstatement, will be equal to the policy value on the date the policy terminated. Any policy debt not paid upon termination of a policy will be reinstated if the policy is reinstated.
Generally, the suicide exclusion and incontestability provisions will apply from the effective date of reinstatement. A surrendered policy cannot be reinstated.
Variations
Insurance laws and regulations apply to us in every state in which our policies are sold. As a result, terms and conditions of your insurance coverage may vary depending on where you purchase a policy. Specific variations from the information appearing in this prospectus which are required due to insurance laws and regulations are contained in your policy, or in riders or endorsements attached to your policy. You should refer to your policy for these state specific features.
We may vary the charges and other terms of our policies where special circumstances result in sales or administrative expenses, mortality risks or other risks that are different from those normally associated with the policies, subject to the maximum charges described in this prospectus. For example, with respect to policies issued to a class of associated individuals or to a trustee, employer or similar entity where we anticipate that the sales to the members of the class will result in lower than normal sales or administrative expenses, lower taxes or lower risks to us, we may offer the policies with reduced charges or with additional or enhanced features or benefits. We will make these programs available in accordance with our established administrative procedures in effect at the time of the application for a policy. The factors we consider in determining the eligibility of a particular group for such a program are: (i) the nature of the association and its organizational framework; (ii) the method by which sales will be made to the members of the class; (iii) the facility with which premiums will be collected from the associated individuals and the association’s capabilities with respect to administrative tasks; (iv) the anticipated lapse and surrender rates of the policies; (v) the size of the class of associated individuals and the number of years it has been in existence; (vi) the aggregate amount of premiums paid; and (vii) any other such circumstances which result in a reduction in sales or administrative expenses, lower taxes or lower risks. Any reduction in charges or feature or benefit enhancement will be reasonable and will apply uniformly to all prospective policy investors in the class and will not unfairly discriminate against any owner.
Policy or Separate Account Changes
We reserve the right to make any changes in the policy necessary to ensure the policy is within the definition of life insurance under the Federal tax laws and is in compliance with any changes in Federal or state tax laws.
In our policies, we reserve the right to make certain changes if they would serve the best interests of policy owners or would be appropriate in carrying out the purposes of the policies. These changes include the following:
• Changes necessary to comply with or obtain or continue exemptions under the Federal securities laws
• Adding or removing fixed accounts or variable investment accounts
• Combining variable investment accounts
• Closing the variable investment accounts to new allocations or transfers
• Changes in the form of organization of any separate account
Any such changes will be made only to the extent permitted by applicable laws and only in the manner permitted by such laws. When required by law, we will obtain your approval of the changes and the approval of any appropriate regulatory authority.
We also reserve the right, subject to compliance with applicable law, including approval of owners if so required, (1) to transfer assets determined by John Hancock USA to be associated with the class of policies to which your policy belongs from the Separate Account to another separate account or subaccount, (2) to deregister the Separate Account under the 1940 Act, (3) to substitute for the fund shares held by a subaccount any other investment permitted by law, and (4) to take any action necessary to comply with or obtain any exemptions from the 1940 Act. Any such change will be made only if, in our judgment, the change would best serve the interests of owners of policies in your policy class or would be appropriate in
37

carrying out the purposes of such policies. We would notify owners of any of the foregoing changes and to the extent legally required, obtain approval of affected owners and any regulatory body prior thereto. Such notice and approval, however, may not be legally required in all cases.
When We Pay Policy Proceeds
We will ordinarily pay any death benefit, withdrawal, surrender value or loan within seven days after we receive the last required form or request (and, with respect to the death benefit, any other documentation that may be required). You may choose to receive proceeds from the policy as a single sum. If we do not have information about the desired manner of payment within seven days after the date we receive documentation of the insured person’s death, we will pay the proceeds as a single sum. As permitted by state law and our current administrative procedures, death claim proceeds may be placed into an interest-bearing John Hancock retained asset account in the beneficiary’s name. The interest earned in a John Hancock retained asset account is normally subject to income tax. You should consult with your tax advisor if you have any questions regarding taxation of the interest earned. We will provide the beneficiary with a checkbook, so checks may be written for all or a part of the proceeds. The retained asset account is part of our general account and is subject to the claims of our creditors. It is not a bank account and it is not insured by the FDIC. We may receive a benefit from managing proceeds held in a retained asset account. Alternatively, you can elect to have proceeds of $1,000 or more applied to any of the other payment options we may offer at the time. You cannot choose an option if the monthly payments under the option would be less than $50. We will issue a supplementary agreement when the proceeds are applied to any alternative payment option. That agreement will spell out terms of the option in full. Please contact our Service Office for more information.
We reserve the right to defer payment of that portion of your policy value that is attributable to a premium payment made by check for a reasonable period of time (not to exceed fifteen days) to allow the check to clear the banking system. We will not delay payment longer than necessary for us to verify a check has cleared the banking system.
We reserve the right to defer payment of any death benefit, loan or other distribution that is derived from a variable investment account if (1) the NYSE is closed (other than customary weekend and holiday closings) or trading on the NYSE is restricted; (2) an emergency exists, as determined by the SEC, as a result of which disposal of securities is not reasonably practicable or it is not reasonably practicable to fairly determine the policy value; or (3) the SEC by order permits the delay for the protection of owners. Transfers and allocations of policy value among the variable investment accounts may also be postponed under these circumstances. If we need to defer calculation of separate account values for any of the foregoing reasons, all delayed transactions will be processed at the next values that we do compute.
State laws allow us to defer payment of any portion of the net cash surrender value derived from the fixed account for up to six months. These laws were enacted many years ago to help insurance companies in the event of a liquidity crisis.
Coverage at and After Age 100
At and after the policy anniversary nearest the insured person’s 100th birthday, the following will occur:
• We will stop any monthly deduction charges.
• We will stop accepting any premium payments.
• We will no longer process withdrawals.
• We will continue to credit interest to a fixed account. • We will not allow any new loans and loan interest will continue to be charged if there is an outstanding loan.
38

General Description of Registrant, Depositor and Portfolios
Depositor
Your policy is issued by John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.), 200 Berkeley St., Boston, MA 02116.
Registrant
The “registrant” of the policies with the SEC is the John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N, a separate account operated by us under Michigan law (the “Separate Account”). Each subaccount of the Separate Account invests its assets in one of the portfolios shown in the APPENDIX.
The Separate Account’s assets are our property. Each policy provides that amounts we hold in the Separate Account pursuant to the policies cannot be reached by any other persons who may have claims against us and can’t be used to pay any obligations of John Hancock USA other than those arising out of policies that use the Separate Account. Income, gains and losses credited to, or charged against, the Separate Account reflect the Separate Account’s own investment experience and not the investment experience of John Hancock USA’s other assets. All obligations under the policies (including under any fixed account options), guarantees, or benefits are obligations of John Hancock USA and are subject to its claims paying ability.
We normally compute policy values for each business day as of the close of the NYSE on that day (usually 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). In case of emergency or other disruption resulting in the NYSE closing at a time other than the regularly scheduled close, the close of our business day may be the regularly scheduled close of the NYSE or another time permitted by the SEC and applicable regulations. Over time, the amount you’ve invested in any variable investment account will increase or decrease the same as if you had invested the same amount directly in the corresponding portfolio and had reinvested all of that portfolios’ dividends and distributions in additional portfolio shares, except that we will deduct certain additional charges which will reduce your policy value. We describe these charges under “Charges at the portfolio level.” For certain policy years, we also will apply a policy credit to your policy value.
Portfolios
Information regarding each portfolio, including (i) its name; (ii) its investment objective; (iii) its investment adviser and any sub- investment adviser; (iv) current expenses; and (v) performance is available in the APPENDIX to this prospectus. Each portfolio has issued a prospectus that contains more detailed information about the portfolio. You can obtain the prospectus (hard copy or electronic) and additional information about any portfolio, at the addresses or phone number set forth in the first paragraph of the APPENDIX. On each business day, shares of each series are purchased or redeemed by us for each subaccount based on, among other things, the amount of net premiums allocated to the subaccount, distributions reinvested, and transfers to, from and among subaccounts, all to be effected as of that date. Such purchases and redemptions are effected at each series fund’s net asset value per share determined for that same date. A “business day” is any date on which the NYSE is open for trading.
We will purchase and redeem series fund shares for the Separate Account at their net asset value without any sales or redemption charges. Shares of a series fund represent an interest in one of the funds of the series fund which corresponds to a subaccount of the Separate Account. Any dividend or capital gains distributions received by the Separate Account will be reinvested in shares of that same fund at their net asset value as of the dates paid. We normally calculate the unit values for each variable investment account once every business day as of the close of that day, usually 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. Sales and redemptions within any variable investment account will be transacted using the unit value calculated as follows after we receive your request either in writing or other form that we specify: If we receive your request before the close of our business day, we’ll use the unit value calculated as of the end of that business day. If we receive your request at or after the close of our business day, we’ll use the unit value calculated as of the end of the next business day. If a scheduled transaction falls on a day that is not a business day, we’ll process it as of the end of the next business day.
Voting Portfolio Shares
We will vote all portfolio shares that we hold in the Separate Account for policy owners in proportion to instructions timely received by us from policy owners from all our Separate Accounts that are registered with the SEC under the 1940 Act. We will vote all portfolio shares that we otherwise are entitled to vote (including our own shares and other shares for which we receive no instructions) on any matter in proportion to the instructions timely received by us and any affiliated insurance
39

companies with respect to the matter from policy owners in separate accounts of these insurance companies that are registered with the SEC under the 1940 Act. The effect of this proportional voting is that a small number of policy owners can determine the outcome of a vote. The voting privileges described above reflect our understanding of applicable Federal securities law requirements. To the extent that applicable law, regulations or interpretations change to eliminate or restrict the need for such voting privileges, we reserve the right to proceed in accordance with any such revised requirements.
We will determine the number of portfolio shares for which voting instructions may be given not more than 90 days prior to the meeting. Proxy material will be distributed to each person having the voting interest under the policy together with appropriate forms for giving voting instructions.
We determine the number of a portfolio’s shares held in a subaccount attributable to each owner by dividing the amount of a policy’s variable investment account value held in the subaccount by the net asset value of one share in the series fund. Fractional votes will be counted. We determine the number of shares as to which the owner may give instructions as of the record date for a series fund’s meeting. Owners of policies may give instructions regarding the election of the Board of Trustees or Board of Directors of a series fund, ratification of the selection of independent auditors, approval of series fund investment advisory agreements and other matters requiring a shareholder vote.
Legal Proceedings
There are no legal proceedings to which the Depositor, the Separate Account or the principal underwriter is a party or to which the assets of the Separate Account are subject that are likely to have a material adverse effect on the Separate Account or the ability of the principal underwriter to perform its contract with the Separate Account or of the Depositor to meet its obligations under the policy
Financial Statements
The financial statements of the Separate Account, as well as the consolidated financial statements of John Hancock USA are in the SAI. The financial statements of John Hancock USA have relevance for the policies only to the extent that they bear upon its ability to meet its obligations under the policies. You may request an SAI by contacting our Service Office at a phone number or address shown on the back cover of this prospectus.
40

Appendix: Portfolios Available Under The Policy
The following is a list of portfolios available under the policies. More information about the portfolios is available in the prospectuses for the portfolios, which may be amended from time to time. You can find the prospectuses and other information about the portfolios at dfinview.com/JohnHancock/TAHD/CVUL2003. You can also request this information at no cost by calling 1-800-732-5543 or by sending an email request to webmail@jhancock.com.
The current expenses and performance information below reflect fees and expenses of the portfolios, but do not reflect the other fees and expenses that your policy may charge. Expenses would be higher and performance would be lower if these other charges were included. Each portfolio’s past performance is not necessarily an indication of future performance.
Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To approximate the aggregate total return
of a broad-based U.S. domestic equity
market index.
500 Index Trust - Series NAV
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.25%*
25.95
15.40
11.75
To seek income and capital appreciation.
Active Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.71%
6.43
1.62
2.34
To seek to provide high total return
(including income and capital gains)
consistent with preservation of capital
over the long term.
American Asset Allocation Trust - Series
I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
0.93%
13.90
8.80
6.86
To seek to provide long-term growth of
capital.
American Global Growth Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
1.06%*
22.12
13.20
9.17
To seek to provide growth of capital.
American Growth Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
0.97%*
37.99
18.24
13.94
To seek to provide long-term growth of
capital and income.
American Growth-Income Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
0.91%*
25.68
12.95
10.52
To seek to provide long-term growth of
capital.
American International Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
1.17%*
15.39
4.44
3.02
To provide long-term growth of capital.
Current income is a secondary objective.
Blue Chip Growth Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
0.82%*
49.56
13.53
12.34
Appendix-1

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Capital Appreciation Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Jennison Associates LLC
0.81%*
52.85
17.98
14.11
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Capital Appreciation Value Trust - Series
I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
0.94%*
18.18
12.42
10.24
To seek total return consisting of income
and capital appreciation.
Core Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Allspring Global Investments, LLC
0.68%*
5.80
1.05
1.69
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Disciplined Value International Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Boston Partners Global Investors,
Inc.
0.84%*
19.96
8.42
3.05
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Emerging Markets Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Dimensional Fund Advisors LP
1.08%*
15.19
5.38
3.01
To provide substantial dividend income
and also long-term growth of capital.
Equity Income Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
0.76%*
9.39
11.08
7.82
To seek growth of capital.
Financial Industries Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.94%*
5.22
9.67
7.04
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Fundamental All Cap Core Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.76%*
35.40
18.31
12.26
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Fundamental Large Cap Value Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.78%*
23.45
17.57
10.18
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Global Equity Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.94%*
20.09
8.94
4.52
Appendix-2

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Health Sciences Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.05%*
4.25
10.52
10.89
To realize an above-average total return
over a market cycle of three to five years,
consistent with reasonable risk.
High Yield Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Western Asset Management
Company, LLC
0.86%*
13.05
4.90
3.54
To seek to track the performance of a
broad-based equity index of foreign
companies primarily in developed
countries and, to a lesser extent, in
emerging markets.
International Equity Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/SSGA Funds Management, Inc.
0.39%*
15.36
6.90
3.65
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
International Small Company Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Dimensional Fund Advisors LP
1.05%*
13.44
7.00
4.21
To provide a high level of current income
consistent with the maintenance of
principal and liquidity.
Investment Quality Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.76%*
6.49
1.37
1.94
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Current income is also a consideration.
Lifestyle Growth Portfolio - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.67%
17.00
9.09
6.72
To seek growth of capital and current
income while seeking to both manage the
volatility of return and limit the
magnitude of portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Balanced Portfolio -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.81%
11.99
4.62
3.81
To seek current income and growth of
capital, while seeking to both manage the
volatility of return and limit the
magnitude of portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Conservative Portfolio
- Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.80%
5.47
1.74
2.36
To seek long term growth of capital while
seeking to both manage the volatility of
return and limit the magnitude of
portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Growth Portfolio -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.84%
13.69
5.18
3.70
Appendix-3

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To seek current income and growth of
capital while seeking to both manage the
volatility of return and limit the
magnitude of portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Moderate Portfolio -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.80%
10.64
4.15
3.72
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Mid Cap Growth Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.95%
18.71
12.32
9.73
Seeks to approximate the aggregate total
return of a mid cap U.S. domestic equity
market index.
Mid Cap Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.46%*
16.01
12.14
8.81
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Mid Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.01%*
18.52
13.06
9.29
To obtain maximum current income
consistent with preservation of principal
and liquidity.
Money Market Trust** - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.33%*
4.76
1.64
1.04
To seek maximum total return, consistent
with preservation of capital and prudent
investment management.
Opportunistic Fixed Income Trust - Series
I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.93%*
8.23
2.67
2.16
To seek to achieve a combination of long-
term capital appreciation and current
income.
Real Estate Securities Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.81%*
13.02
7.69
7.94
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Current income is incidental to the fund’s
objective.
Science & Technology Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.04%*
54.68
18.61
15.70
To seek income and capital appreciation.
Select Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.65%*
6.10
1.34
1.86
To seek a high level of current income
consistent with preservation of capital.
Maintaining a stable share price is a
secondary goal.
Short Term Government Income Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.72%*
3.92
0.48
0.62
Appendix-4

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
Seeks to approximate the aggregate total
return of a small cap U.S. domestic equity
market index.
Small Cap Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.53%*
16.49
9.56
6.80
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Small Cap Opportunities Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Dimensional Fund Advisors LP and
GW&K Investment Management, LLC
0.89%*
18.05
13.93
7.86
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Small Cap Stock Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
1.13%*
16.10
11.10
7.37
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Small Cap Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
1.04%*
14.01
8.80
6.02
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Small Company Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.21%*
13.49
9.19
6.54
To seek a high level of current income.
Strategic Income Opportunities Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.79%*
7.37
3.25
2.79
Seeks to approximate the aggregate total
return of a broad U.S. domestic equity
market index.
Total Stock Market Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.58%*
25.53
14.38
10.73
The fund seeks a high level of current
income consistent with the maintenance
of liquidity and the preservation of
capital.
Ultra Short Term Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.67%*
4.60
1.55
1.03
Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
The Portfolio seeks maximum real return
consistent with preservation of real
capital and prudent investment
management.
PIMCO VIT All Asset Portfolio - Series
M
Pacific Investment Management
Company LLC/Research Affiliates, LLC
2.49%*
7.83
5.69
3.73
* This portfolio’s annual expenses reflect temporary fee or expense waivers or reimbursements.
Appendix-5

** This Portfolio is no longer accepting premium payments .
Appendix-6

JOHN HANCOCK USA SERVICE OFFICE
Overnight Express Delivery
Mail Delivery
Life Post Issue – Specialty Products
John Hancock Insurance Company
372 University Ave, Suite #55979
Westwood, MA 02090
Life Post Issue: - Specialty Products
John Hancock Insurance Company
PO Box 55979
Boston, MA 02205
Phone:
 
1-800-732-5543
 
In addition to this prospectus, John Hancock USA has filed with the SEC an SAI that contains additional information about John Hancock USA and the Separate Account, including information on our history, services provided to the Separate Account, and the audited financial statements for John Hancock USA and the Separate Account. The SAI is incorporated by reference into this prospectus and personalized illustrations of death benefits, policy values and surrender values are available, without charge, upon request. You may obtain the personalized illustrations from your John Hancock USA representative. You can view the SAI and other information about your Policy at dfinview.com/JohnHancock/TAHD/CVUL2003. The SAI may also be obtained, without charge, by contacting the John Hancock USA Service Office. You should also contact the John Hancock USA Service Office to request any other information about your policy or to make any inquiries about its operation.
Reports and other information about the Separate Account are available on the SEC’s Internet website at http://www.sec.gov. Copies of such information may be obtained, upon payment of a duplicating fee, by submitting an electronic request to the following email address: publicinfo@sec.gov.
1940 Act File No. 811-51301933 Act File No. 333-100567
EDGAR Contract Identifier No. C000027518


John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.)
(“John Hancock USA”)
Flexible Premium Variable Universal Life Insurance Policy
CORPORATE VUL 04
Prospectus dated April 29, 2024
You may choose to allocate your policy value to one or more of the options that the policies make available for that purpose. These options include our “variable investment accounts,” where the policy value will vary directly with the positive or negative investment experience of underlying investment “portfolios.” To provide you with that investment experience, amounts that you allocate to a variable investment account are held in a corresponding “subaccount” of John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N (“Separate Account”), and the subaccount invests those amounts exclusively in one of the portfolios.
You may also allocate policy value to a “fixed account” that the policy makes available. This prospectus provides detailed information about all such options to which you can allocate your policy value.
Please note that the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has not approved or disapproved these securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
Additional information about certain investment products, including variable life insurance, has been prepared by the SEC’s staff and is available at Investor.gov.

Table of Contents
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Appendix-1
3

important Information you should consider about the policy
FEES AND EXPENSES
Transaction Charges
You may be charged for the following transactions:
A premium charge will be deducted from each premium payment.
A sales charge will be deducted from each premium payment.
A transfer fee may be deducted upon transfers into or out of a variable
investment account after you have made more than 12 such transfers in a
year.
FEE TABLE
Deductions from policy
value
Ongoing Fees and
Expenses (annual charges)
In addition to transaction charges, you will also be subject to certain ongoing
fees and expenses, including a cost of insurance charge, administration fee, a
mortality and expense risk charge, policy loan costs, and supplementary
benefit rider charges. Some of these fees and expenses are based wholly or in
part on the characteristics of the insured person (e.g., age, sex, and
underwriting classification).
You should view the “policy specifications” page of your policy for rates
applicable to your policy.
FEE TABLE
Deductions from policy
value
You will also bear expenses associated with the portfolios under the policy,
as shown in the following table:
Charges at the portfolio
level
APPENDIX
Annual Fee
Minimum
Maximum
Variable investment accounts (portfolio fees
and expenses)
0.44%
2.58%
RISKS
Risk of Loss
You can lose money by investing in this policy.
PRINCIPAL RISKS OF
INVESTING IN A
POLICY
Not a Short- Term
Investment
This policy is not a short-term investment and is not appropriate for
an investor who needs ready access to cash. The policy is unsuitable
as a short-term savings vehicle because of substantial policy-level
charges, including the premium charge, as well as potential adverse
tax consequences from such short-term use.
Early Surrender or
Withdrawal Risk/Not a
Short-Term Investment
Risks Associated with
Investment Options
An investment in this policy is subject to the risk of poor
performance and can vary depending on the performance of the
account allocation options available under the policy (e.g.,
portfolios). Each such option (including the fixed account) will have
its own unique risks, and you should review these options before
making an allocation decision. You can find the prospectuses and
other information about the portfolios at
dfinview.com/JohnHancock/TAHD/CVUL2004.
Investment Risk/Risk of
Loss
Insurance Company
Risks
Your investment in the policy is subject to risks related to John
Hancock USA, including that the obligations (including under the
fixed account option), guarantees, or benefits are subject to the
claims-paying ability of John Hancock USA. Information about John
Hancock USA, including its financial strength ratings, is available
upon request from your John Hancock USA representative. Our
current financial strength ratings can also be obtained by contacting
the Service Office at 1-800-732-5543.
Depositor
Registrant
4

RISKS
Policy Lapse
This policy will go into default if at the beginning of any policy
month the policy’s net cash surrender value would be zero or below
after deducting the monthly deductions then due. The “net cash
surrender value” is your policy value and less any policy debt. This
can happen as a result of insufficient premium payments, poor
performance of the variable or general account options you have
chosen, withdrawals, or unpaid loans or loan interest. If a default is
not cured within a 61-day grace period, your policy will lapse without
value, and no death benefit or other benefits will be payable. You can
apply to reinstate a policy that has gone into default, subject to
conditions including payment of a specified amount of additional
premiums.
Lapse and
Reinstatement
RESTRICTIONS
Investments
There are restrictions that may limit the variable investment account
options and general account options (including the fixed account)
that you may choose, as well as limitations on the transfer of policy
value among those options. These restrictions may include a monthly
limit on the number of transfers you may make. We may also impose
additional restrictions to discourage market timing and disruptive
trading activity.
In particular, your allocation options will be affected if you elect to
take a loan or receive benefits under certain supplementary benefit
riders.
Among other things, the policy also allows us to eliminate the shares
of a portfolio or substitute shares of another new or existing
portfolio, subject to applicable legal requirements.
Transfers to or from a
variable investment
account
Transfers involving the
fixed account
Portfolios
Optional Benefits
There are restrictions and limitations relating to optional benefits, as
well as conditions under which an optional benefit may be modified
or terminated by us. For example, certain supplementary benefit
riders may be subject to underwriting, and your election of an option
may result in restrictions upon some of the policy benefits, including
availability of investment options.
More About Certain
Optional Benefits
TAXES
Tax Implications
You should consult with a tax professional to determine the tax
implications of an investment in and payments received under the
policy. There is no additional tax benefit to you if the policy is
purchased through a tax-qualified plan. If we pay out any amount of
your policy value upon surrender or partial withdrawal, all or part of
that distribution would generally be treated as a return of the
premiums you’ve paid and not subjected to income tax, with any
portion not treated as a return of your premiums includible in your
income. Distributions also are subject to tax penalties under some
circumstances.
TAXES
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
Investment Professional
Compensation
Some investment professionals may receive compensation for selling
the policy, including by means of commissions and revenue sharing
arrangements. These investment professionals may have a financial
incentive to offer or recommend this policy over another investment.
Commissions Paid to
Dealers
5

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
Exchanges
Some investment professionals may have a financial incentive to
offer you a new policy in place of the one you already own, and you
should only exchange your policy if you determine, after comparing
the features, fees, and risks of both policies, that it is preferable for
you to purchase the new policy rather than continue to own the
existing policy.
Commissions Paid to
Dealers
6

Overview of the Policy
Purpose
The purpose of this variable life insurance policy is to provide insurance protection for the beneficiary named therein. No claim is made that this variable life insurance policy is in any way similar or comparable to a systematic investment plan of a mutual fund.
Premiums
We call the investments you make in the policy “premiums” or “premium payments.” The minimum initial premium is a dollar amount that is stated in your policy specifications and that must be paid to us in full before your policy will take effect. Premium payments after the initial premium may not be required, but you must pay enough premium to keep the policy in force. That’s why the policy is called a “flexible premium” policy. After the payment of the initial premium, premiums may be paid at any time and in any amount until the insured person’s attained age 100, subject to the need to pay enough premium to keep the policy in force, and to limitations on maximum premium amount.
Federal tax law limits the amount of premium payments you can make relative to the amount of your policy’s insurance coverage. We will not knowingly accept any amount by which a premium payment exceeds this limit. In addition, in order to limit our investment risk exposure under certain market conditions, we may refuse to accept additional premium payments.
From each premium payment you make, we deduct the applicable premium charges identified in the FEE TABLE. We invest the rest (the “net premium”) in the variable investment accounts or fixed account as you’ve elected.
The policy offers a number of variable investment accounts. You can find some important information about each portfolio in the APPENDIX, but for a full description of each portfolio, including the investment objectives and strategies, policies, restrictions, and risks, you should read the portfolio’s prospectus carefully before investing in the corresponding variable investment account.
You can also allocate policy value to the fixed account (where it is credited with rates of interest that we declare from time to time but will never be less than a minimum rate guaranteed in your policy specifications). If the net cash surrender value is insufficient to pay the charges when due your policy can terminate (i.e. “lapse”). This can happen because you haven’t paid enough premium, because the performance of the variable investment or general account options you’ve chosen has been poor, or because of a combination of all factors.
Policy Features
Death benefit. The policy provides a death benefit in the event of the death of the life insured while the policy is in force. The basic death benefit amount is the Face Amount, which is provided for the lifetime of the life insured with no maturity or expiration date. There may be other amounts added to the death benefit as described below.
Flexible Term Insurance Option. You may add a flexible term insurance option rider (the “FTIO Rider”) to the policy to provide additional term life insurance coverage on the life insured. Cost of insurance rates are less than or equal to those of the policy and no sales charges will apply. However, unlike the Face Amount of the policy, the FTIO Rider will terminate at the life insured’s attained age 100. The FTIO Rider also offers the flexibility to schedule varying death benefit amounts on future dates (the “Scheduled Death Benefits”).
Death Benefit Options. There are two death benefit Options. Option 1 provides a death benefit equal to the Face Amount of the policy and the Scheduled Death Benefits of the FTIO Rider or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit. Option 2 provides a death benefit equal to the Face Amount and the Scheduled Death Benefits, plus the policy value or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit. You may change the death benefit Option and increase or decrease the Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits.
Age 100 Advantage. If the life insured is alive on the policy anniversary when the life insured reaches attained age 100, the policy will continue in force subject to the following unless the policy owner chooses to surrender the policy for its net cash surrender value:
• the policy will be continued until the earlier of the death of the life insured or the date the policy owner surrenders the policy;
7

• no additional premium payments will be accepted although loan repayments will be accepted;
• no additional charges or deductions (described under “Charges and Deductions”) will be assessed;
• interest on any Policy Debt will continue to accrue;
• the policy owner may continue to transfer portions of the policy value among the investment accounts and the fixed accounts as described in this prospectus.
Surrender of the policy. You may surrender the policy in full while the insured person is alive. If you do, we will pay you the policy value less any outstanding policy debt. This is called your “net cash surrender value.”
Withdrawals. You may make a withdrawal of part of your net cash surrender value at any time. This may result in a decrease in the Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits.
Policy loans. If your policy is in force and has sufficient policy value, you may borrow from it at any time by completing the appropriate form. The maximum amount you can borrow is determined by a formula as described in your policy. Interest is charged on each loan. If there is an outstanding loan the amount of the loan and accrued interest will be deducted from the death benefit and other policy proceeds.
Supplementary benefit riders. When you apply for the policy, you can request the below-listed supplementary benefit rider that we make available. Availability of riders varies from state to state. Charges for most riders will be deducted monthly from the policy value. Some riders may not be available in combination with other riders or benefits.
• Flexible Term Insurance Option Rider
You can find information about the fees we charge for this rider under “Transaction Fees” and “Periodic Charges other than Annual Portfolio ExpensesOptional Benefit Charges” in the Fee Table below. We also offer a dollar cost averaging (“DCA”) program and an asset allocation balancer program.
8

Fee Table
The following tables describe the fees and expenses that you will pay when buying, owning, and surrendering or making withdrawals from the policy. Please refer to your policy specifications for information about the specific fees you will pay each year based on the options you have elected.
The first table describes the fees and expenses that you will pay at the time that you buy the policy, surrender or make withdrawals from the policy, or transfer policy value between investment options.
TRANSACTION FEES
Charge
When Charge is Deducted
Amount Deducted
Premium charge
Upon receipt of premium
2.5% of each premium payment
Premium sales charge
Upon receipt of premium
13% (coverage year 1)(1)
Transfer fee(2)
Upon each transfer into or out of a variable
investment account beyond an annual limit
of twelve
$25.00
Dollar cost averaging
Upon transfer
Guaranteed $5.00
Current $0.00
Asset allocation rebalancer
Upon transfer
Guaranteed $15.00
Current $0.00
(1)The sales charge declines in subsequent coverage years as noted below:
Coverage Year
Percentage
1
13.00%
2
6.25%
3
3.50%
4
2.50%
5
0.50%
6
0.50%
7+
0.00%
(2)This charge is not currently imposed, but we reserve the right to do so in the policy.
The next table describes the fees and expenses that you will pay periodically during the time that you own the policy, not including portfolio fees and expenses.
PERIODIC CHARGES OTHER THAN ANNUAL PORTFOLIO EXPENSES
Charge
When Charge is Deducted
Amount Deducted
Base Policy Charges:
 
 
Cost of Insurance(1):
Monthly
 
Minimum charge
 
$0.00 per $1,000 of NAR
Maximum charge
 
$83.33 per $1,000 of NAR
Charge for a representative insured
person (45 year old non-smoking
male)
 
$0.08 per $1,000 of NAR
Cost of InsuranceOptional FTIO Rider
(Flexible Term Insurance Option)(1)
Monthly
 
Minimum charge
 
$0.00 per $1,000 of NAR
Maximum charge
 
$83.33 per $1,000 of NAR
Charge for a representative insured
person (45 year old non-smoking
male)
 
$0.38 per $1,000 of NAR
Administration fee
Monthly
$12.00
Mortality and expense risk fee(2)
Monthly
0.04% (0.50% annually)
9

PERIODIC CHARGES OTHER THAN ANNUAL PORTFOLIO EXPENSES
Charge
When Charge is Deducted
Amount Deducted
Maximum policy loan interest rate
(net)(3)
Accrues daily
Payable annually
0.75% annual rate
(1)The cost of insurance varies based on individual characteristics and the charges shown in the table may not be representative of the charge a particular policy owner will pay. A policy owner may obtain additional information regarding cost of insurance charge by contacting the Company. The election (or failure to elect) the optional FTIO rider will impact the total cost of insurance charges.
(2)Currently the Company is charging the following rates:
Policy Year
Annual Rate
1-10
0.45%
11+
0.25%
(3)The Loan Interest Rate (Net) is equal to the rate of interest charged on the policy loan less the interest credited to the Loan Account. Currently this rate is 0.75% for policy years 1-10 and 0.25% for policy years 11 and higher. The maximum loan rate is 4%.
The next item shows the minimum and maximum total operating expenses charged by the portfolios that you may pay periodically during the time that you own the policy. A complete list of the portfolios available under the policy, including their annual expenses, may be found at the back of this document.
Annual Portfolio Expenses
Minimum
Maximum
Range of expenses that are deducted from portfolio assets, including
management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees, and other
expenses
0.44%
2.58%
10

General Description of the Policy
Policy Rights
Owner and beneficiary. The owner of the policy is the person who can exercise most of the rights under the policy, such as the right to choose the accounts in which to invest or the right to surrender the policy. In many cases, the person buying the policy is also the person who will be the owner. However, the application for a policy can name another person or entity (such as a trust) as owner. It is possible to name so-called “joint owners” of the policy. If more than one person owns a policy, all owners must join in most requests to exercise rights under the policy. Whenever we’ve used the term “you” in this prospectus, we’ve assumed that the reader is the person who has whatever right or privilege is being discussed. There may be tax consequences if the owner and the insured person are different, so you should discuss this issue with your tax adviser.
While the insured person is alive, you will have a number of options under the policy. These options include:
• Determine when and how much you allocate to the variable investment accounts and any fixed account
• Borrow or withdraw amounts you have in the variable investment account and any fixed account
• Change the beneficiary who will receive the death benefit
• Change the amount of insurance
• Surrender the policy for its net cash surrender value
• Choose the form in which we will pay out the death benefit or other proceeds
You name your beneficiary when you apply for the policy. The beneficiary is entitled to the proceeds we pay following the insured person’s death. Until the death of the insured person you can change your beneficiary by written request. Such a change requires the consent of any named irrevocable beneficiary. A new beneficiary designation will not affect any payments we make before we receive it. If no beneficiary is living when the insured person dies, we will pay the insurance proceeds to the owner or the owner’s estate.
Allocation of Premiums
You may allocate premiums to the fixed account and investment accounts. Allocations may be made as percentages that are between zero and 100% that sum to exactly 100%. Alternatively, you may allocate a premium in dollar amounts that sum to exactly the net premium amount. You may change premium allocations at any time and the change will take effect on the date a request for change satisfactory to us is received at the Service Office.
Transfers of Policy Value
Transfers to or from a variable investment account. The policy is not designed for professional market timers or highly active traders, including persons or entities that engage in programmed, large or frequent transfers among the investment accounts or between the investment accounts and any available fixed account. The policy is also not designed to accommodate trading that results in transfers that are large in relation to the total assets of the underlying portfolio.
Variable investment accounts in variable life insurance products can be a prime target for abusive transfer activity because these products value their investment options on a daily basis and allow transfers among investment options without immediate tax consequences. As a result, some investors may seek to frequently transfer into and out of variable investment accounts or to make large transfers in reaction to market news or to exploit a perceived pricing inefficiency. Whatever the reason, long-term investors in a variable investment account can be harmed by large or frequent transfer activity. For example, such activity may expose the investment account’s underlying portfolio to increased portfolio transaction costs and/or disrupt the portfolio manager’s ability to effectively manage the portfolio’s investments in accordance with the portfolio’s investment objectives and policies. This could include causing the portfolio to maintain higher levels of cash than would otherwise be the case, or liquidating investments prematurely. Accordingly, frequent or large transfers may result in dilution with respect to interests held for long-term investment and adversely affect policy owners, beneficiaries and the underlying portfolios.
To discourage market timing and disruptive trading activity, we impose restrictions on transfers and reserve the right to change, suspend or terminate telephone and facsimile transaction privileges. In addition, we reserve the right to take other actions at any time to restrict trading, including, but not limited to: (i) restricting the number of transfers made during a
11

defined period, (ii) restricting the dollar amount of transfers, (iii) restricting transfers into and out of certain investment options, (iv) restricting the method used to submit transfers, and (v) deferring a transfer at any time we are unable to purchase or redeem shares of the underlying portfolio.
We may also impose additional administrative conditions upon or prohibit a transfer request made by a third party giving instructions on behalf of multiple policies, whether owned by the same owner or different owners. If you engage a third party for asset allocation services, then you may be subject to these transfer restrictions because of the actions of that party in providing those services. We will notify the third party you have engaged if we exercise this right.
While we seek to identify and prevent disruptive trading activity, it may not always be possible to do so. Therefore, no assurance can be given that the restrictions we impose will be successful in preventing all disruptive trading and avoiding harm to long-term investors.
Our current practice is to restrict transfers into or out of variable investment accounts to two per calendar month (except with respect to those policies described in the following paragraph). In applying this restriction any transfer request involving the transfer of account value into or out of multiple variable investment accounts will still count as only one request. No more than one transfer request may be made on any day. You may, however, transfer to the Money Market portfolio even if the two transfer per month limit has been reached, but only if 100% of the policy value in all variable investment accounts is transferred to the Money Market portfolio. If such a transfer to the Money Market investment portfolio is made, then, for the 30 calendar day period after such transfer, no transfers from the Money Market portfolio to any other variable investment accounts or to the fixed account may be made. If a policy offers a dollar cost averaging or automatic asset allocation rebalancing program, any transfers pursuant to such program are not considered transfers subject to these restrictions on frequent trading. The restrictions described in this paragraph will be applied uniformly to all policy owners subject to the restrictions.
Policies may be purchased by a corporation or other entity as a means to informally finance the liabilities created by an employee benefit plan, and to this end the entity may aggregately manage the policies purchased to match its liabilities under the plan. Policies sold under these circumstances are subject to special transfer restrictions. In lieu of the two transfers per month restriction, we will allow the policy owner under these circumstances to rebalance the investment options in its policies within the following limits: (i) during the 10 calendar day period after any account values are transferred from one portfolio into a second portfolio, the values can only be transferred out of the second investment option if they are transferred into the Money Market portfolio; and (ii) any account values that would otherwise not be transferable by application of the 10 day limit described above and that are transferred into the Money Market portfolio may not be transferred out of the Money Market portfolio into any other investment options (variable or fixed) for 30 calendar days. The restrictions described in this paragraph will be applied uniformly to all policy owners subject to the restrictions.
Subject to our approval, we may offer policies purchased by a corporation or other entity that has purchased policies to match its liabilities under an employee benefit plan, as described above, the ability to electronically rebalance the investment options in its policies. Under these circumstances, in lieu of imposing any specific limit upon the number or timing of transfers, we will monitor aggregate trades among the sub-accounts for frequency, pattern and size for potentially harmful investment practices. If we detect trading activity that we believe may be harmful to the overall operation of any investment account or underlying portfolio, we may impose conditions on policies employing electronic rebalancing to submit trades, including setting limits upon the number and timing of transfers, and revoking privileges to make trades by any means other than written communication submitted via U.S. mail. The restrictions described in these paragraphs will be applied uniformly to all policy owners subject to the restrictions.
We reserve the right to modify or terminate the transfer privilege at any time in accordance with applicable law. Transfer privileges are also subject to any restrictions that may be imposed by the portfolios. In addition, we reserve the right to defer the transfer privilege at any time that we are unable to purchase or redeem shares of a portfolio.
Rule 22c-2 under the 1940 Act requires us to provide tax identification numbers and other policy owner transaction information to John Hancock Trust or to other investment companies in which the Separate Account invests, at their request. An investment company will use this information to identify any pattern or frequency of investment account transfers that may violate their frequent trading policy. An investment company may require us to impose trading restrictions in addition to those described above if violations of their frequent trading policy are discovered.
12

Transfers involving the fixed account. While the policy is in force, you may transfer the policy value from any of the investment accounts to the fixed account without incurring transfer charges:
• within eighteen months after the Issue Date; or
• within 60 days of the effective date of a material change in the investment objectives of any of the sub-accounts; or
• within 60 days of the date of notification of such change, whichever is later.
Such transfers will not count against the twelve transfers that may be made free of charge in any policy year.
The maximum amount that you may transfer from the fixed account in any one policy year is the greater of $2,000, 15% of the fixed account value at the previous policy anniversary, or the amount transferred out of the fixed account during the previous policy year. Any transfer which involves a transfer out of the fixed account may not involve a transfer to the investment account for the Money Market portfolio.
Telephone transfers. Transfer requests must be in writing in a form satisfactory to us, or by telephone if a currently valid telephone transfer authorization form is on file. Although failure to follow reasonable procedures may result in our being liable for any losses resulting from unauthorized or fraudulent telephone transfers, we will not be liable for following instructions communicated by telephone that we reasonably believe to be genuine. We will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by telephone are genuine. Such procedures shall consist of confirming that a valid telephone authorization form is on file, tape recording of all telephone transactions and providing written confirmation thereof.
Dollar cost averaging and asset allocation balancer programs. We may offer policy owners a dollar cost averaging (“DCA”) program. Under the DCA program, you will designate an amount that will be transferred monthly from one variable investment account into any other variable investment account or a fixed account. If insufficient funds exist to effect a DCA transfer, the transfer will not be effected and you will be so notified. We do not apply any minimum amount requirements for participation in the DCA program. You can participate in both the dollar cost averaging and asset rebalancing programs at the same time. Under the asset allocation balancer program you will designate an allocation of policy value among variable investment accounts. We will move amounts among the variable investment accounts at specified intervals you select - annually, semi-annually, quarterly or monthly. A change to your premium allocation instructions will automatically result in a change in asset allocation balancer instructions so that the two are identical unless you either instruct us otherwise or have elected the dollar cost averaging program. This asset allocation balancer program only applies to policy value in the variable investment accounts. We reserve the right to cease to offer these programs as of 90 days after written notice is sent to you.
General Account
The fixed account is part of our general account. Our general account consists of all assets owned by us other than those in the Separate Account and any other separate accounts which we have established and may establish. Any interest credited to a policy owner from an investment in a fixed account and any guaranteed benefits we may provide under the policy that exceed the value of amounts held in the Separate Account will be paid from the Company’s general account and will be subject to the Company’s financial strength and claims paying ability. Subject to applicable law, John Hancock USA has sole discretion over the investment of the assets of the general account and policy owners do not share in the investment experience of, or have any preferential claim on, those assets. John Hancock USA bears full investment risk for all amounts allocated to the fixed account.
Because of exemptive and exclusionary provisions, interests in our fixed account have not been and will not be registered under the Securities Act of 1933 and our general account has not been registered as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”). Accordingly, neither the general account nor any interests therein are subject to the provisions of these acts. Disclosures regarding the general account, however, are subject generally to applicable provisions of federal securities laws relating to the accuracy and completeness of statements made in the prospectus.
The fixed account. Account value allocated to any fixed account will accrue interest daily at an effective annual rate that we determine and that depends on a number of significant considerations in addition to the actual investment experience we expect for the general account. We currently offer only one fixed investment optionthe standard fixed account. The effective annual rate we declare for the standard fixed account will never be less than 3%. We reserve the right to offer one or more additional fixed investment options with characteristics that differ from those of the current fixed account, but we are
13

under no obligation to do so. Any interest we credit in excess of the guaranteed interest crediting rate will be based on our sole discretion. Additionally, interest credited on a non-guaranteed basis varies over time is rarely the same year-over-year and there may be extended periods of time during which no interest above the guaranteed minimum is declared.
14

Premiums
Purchase Procedures
To purchase a policy, an applicant must submit a completed application. A policy will not be issued until the underwriting process is completed to our satisfaction and we approve issuance of the policy.
Policies may be issued on a basis that does not distinguish between the life insured’s sex and/or smoking status, with prior approval from us. A policy will only be issued on the lives of insureds from Issue Ages 20 through 80.
Each policy has a Policy Date, an Effective Date and an Issue Date. The Policy Date is the date from which the first monthly deductions are calculated and from which policy years, policy months and Policy Anniversaries are measured. The Policy Date is also the effective date of the initial coverage amount. The Policy Date is the same date as the Effective Date unless the policy is backdated. The Effective Date is the date we become obligated under the policy and when the first monthly deductions are taken. It is the later of the date we approve issuance of the policy and the date we receive at least the minimum initial premium. The Issue Date is the date from which the Suicide and Incontestability provisions of the policy are measured.
If we approve issuance of a policy before we receive the minimum initial premium then the Effective Date will be later than the Issue Date. The minimum initial premium must be received by us within 60 days after the Issue Date and the life insured must be in good health on the Effective Date. If the minimum initial premium is not paid or if the application is rejected, the policy will be canceled and any premiums paid will be returned to the applicant.
Net premiums received prior to the Effective Date will be credited with interest at the rate of return earned on amounts allocated to the Money Market portfolio. On the Effective Date, net premiums received plus any interest credited will be allocated to investment accounts and the fixed account according to your instructions, unless first allocated to the Money Market Trust for the duration of the right to examine period.
The minimum Face Amount is $50,000 unless the FTIO Rider is added to the policy. With an FTIO Rider, the minimum Face Amount is $25,000 and the minimum Scheduled Death Benefit is $50,000.
You may request that we backdate the policy by assigning a Policy Date earlier than the date the application is signed. We will not backdate the policy to a date earlier than that allowed by state law, which is generally three months to one year prior to the date of application for the policy. Monthly deductions will be made for the period the Policy Date is backdated.
Temporary insurance agreement. Temporary insurance coverage may be provided under the terms of a Temporary Insurance Agreement, subject to our underwriting practices. Generally, temporary life insurance may not exceed $1,000,000 and may not be in effect for more than 90 days. It is issued on a conditional receipt basis, which means that benefits would only be paid if the life insured met our usual and customary underwriting standards for the coverage applied for.
Underwriting. The policies are offered on three underwriting classes that require different types and amounts of information from the applicant and prospective life insured. Current cost of insurance charges in early policy years will vary by the type of underwriting and charges will generally be lower where underwriting information is more extensive. Under any of the underwriting bases, the acceptance of an application is subject to our underwriting rules and we may request additional information or reject an application for any reason.
Short Form Underwriting. The proposed life insured must answer qualifying questions in the application but is not required to provide detailed medical history, submit records or undergo examinations or tests unless requested to do so by us. Availability of Short Form underwriting depends on characteristics of the Case, such as the number of lives to be insured, the amounts of insurance and other factors, and it is generally available only up to Issue Age 65.
Simplified Underwriting. The proposed life insured must satisfactorily answer certain health questions in the application and may be required to submit existing medical records, but requirements to undergo examinations and tests are minimized. Availability of Simplified underwriting and the nature of the requirements will depend on characteristics of the Case and the proposed lives to be insured.
Regular (Medical) Underwriting. Where Short Form or Simplified underwriting is unavailable we require satisfactory evidence of insurability under our regular underwriting guidelines for individual applicants. This may include medical exams and other information. A proposed life insured who fails to qualify for a standard risk classification may be eligible to be insured with an additional substandard rating.
15

Premium Amount
No premiums will be accepted prior to receipt of a completed application by us. All premiums received prior to the Effective Date of the policy will be held in the general account and credited with interest from the date of receipt at the rate of return earned on amounts allocated to the Money Market Trust.
On the Effective Date, the net premiums paid plus interest credited will be allocated among the investment accounts or the fixed account in accordance with your instructions, unless first allocated to the Money Market Trust for the duration of the right to examine period.
After the payment of the initial premium, premiums may be paid at any time during the lifetime of the life insured prior to attained age 100 and in any amount subject to the premium limitations described below. A policy will be issued with a planned premium, which is based on the amount of premium you wish to pay. We will send you notices of your planned premium at the payment interval you select. However, you are under no obligation to make the planned premium payment.
Payment of premiums will not guarantee that the policy will stay in force and failure to pay premiums will not necessarily cause the policy to lapse. The policy will remain in force so long as the net cash surrender value is sufficient to cover policy charges.
If the policy is issued under the GP Test, the total of all premiums paid may not exceed the then-current maximum premium limitations established by federal income tax law for the policy to qualify as life insurance. The GP Test premium limits are stated in the policy. If a premium is received which would result in total premiums exceeding the applicable GP Test limit, we will only accept that portion of the premium that will not exceed the limit. Any premium in excess of that amount will be returned.
If the policy is issued under the CVA Test, there is no restriction on the amount of premiums that may be paid into a policy, but you must provide satisfactory evidence of insurability before we accept any premium that would increase the death benefit by an amount greater than the increase in policy value.
You may allocate premiums to the fixed account and investment accounts. Allocations may be made as percentages that are between zero and 100% that sum to exactly 100%. Alternatively, you may allocate a premium in dollar amounts that sum to exactly the net premium amount. You may change premium allocations at any time and the change will take effect on the date a request for change satisfactory to us is received at the Service Office.
16

Standard Death Benefits
Standard Death Benefits
If the policy is in force at the time of the life insured’s death we will pay an insurance benefit to the beneficiary. The policy may remain in force for the life insured’s entire lifetime and there is no specified maturity or expiration date.
Insurance benefits are only payable when we receive due proof of death at the Service Office, in the form of either a certified copy of the death certificate, a certified copy of a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction as to the finding of death or other proof satisfactory to us.
The amount of the insurance benefit payable will be the death benefit on the date of death, as described below, less any Policy Debt and outstanding monthly deductions on the date of death. The insurance benefit will be paid in one lump sum unless another form of settlement is agreed to by the beneficiary and us. If the insurance benefit is paid in one sum, we will pay interest from the date of death to the date of payment. If the life insured should die after our receipt of a request for surrender, no insurance benefit will be payable, and we will pay only the net cash surrender value.
Minimum death benefit. Both the CVA Test and the GP Test require the death benefit to be at least a prescribed ratio of the policy value at all times. The Policy’s Minimum Death Benefit ensures that these requirements are met by providing that the death benefit shall be at least equal to the policy value multiplied by the applicable Minimum Death Benefit Percentage for the attained age of the life insured. Tables of Minimum Death Benefit Percentages appear below.
Table of Minimum Death Benefit Percentages.
Age
GP
Test
Percent
CVA
Test
Male
Female
Unisex
20
250%
644%
768%
665%
21
250%
625%
743%
645%
22
250%
607%
720%
626%
23
250%
589%
697%
608%
24
250%
572%
674%
589%
25
250%
554%
652%
571%
26
250%
537%
631%
554%
27
250%
520%
611%
536%
28
250%
504%
591%
519%
29
250%
488%
572%
502%
30
250%
472%
553%
486%
31
250%
457%
535%
470%
32
250%
442%
517%
455%
33
250%
428%
500%
440%
34
250%
414%
484%
426%
35
250%
400%
468%
412%
36
250%
387%
453%
399%
37
250%
375%
438%
386%
38
250%
362%
424%
373%
39
250%
351%
410%
361%
40
250%
340%
397%
350%
41
243%
329%
384%
339%
42
236%
319%
372%
328%
43
229%
309%
361%
318%
44
222%
299%
350%
308%
45
215%
290%
339%
299%
46
209%
281%
329%
290%
47
203%
273%
319%
281%
48
197%
265%
309%
272%
Age
GP
Test
Percent
CVA
Test
Male
Female
Unisex
49
191%
257%
300%
264%
50
185%
249%
291%
257%
51
178%
242%
282%
249%
52
171%
235%
274%
242%
53
164%
228%
266%
235%
54
157%
222%
258%
229%
55
150%
216%
251%
222%
56
146%
210%
244%
216%
57
142%
205%
237%
210%
58
138%
199%
230%
205%
59
134%
194%
224%
199%
60
130%
189%
218%
194%
61
128%
184%
211%
189%
62
126%
180%
206%
185%
63
124%
175%
200%
180%
64
122%
171%
194%
176%
65
120%
167%
189%
172%
66
119%
164%
184%
168%
67
118%
160%
180%
164%
68
117%
157%
175%
160%
69
116%
153%
171%
157%
70
115%
150%
166%
154%
71
113%
147%
162%
151%
72
111%
145%
158%
147%
73
109%
142%
154%
145%
74
107%
139%
151%
142%
75
105%
137%
147%
139%
76
105%
135%
144%
137%
77
105%
133%
141%
135%
17

Age
GP
Test
Percent
CVA
Test
Male
Female
Unisex
78
105%
131%
139%
133%
79
105%
129%
136%
131%
80
105%
127%
133%
129%
81
105%
125%
131%
127%
82
105%
124%
129%
125%
83
105%
122%
127%
124%
84
105%
121%
125%
122%
85
105%
120%
123%
121%
86
105%
118%
121%
119%
87
105%
117%
120%
118%
88
105%
116%
118%
117%
89
105%
115%
117%
116%
Age
GP
Test
Percent
CVA
Test
Male
Female
Unisex
90
105%
114%
115%
115%
91
104%
113%
114%
114%
92
103%
112%
113%
112%
93
102%
111%
112%
111%
94
101%
110%
110%
110%
95
100%
109%
109%
109%
96
100%
107%
107%
107%
97
100%
106%
106%
106%
98
100%
104%
104%
104%
99
100%
103%
103%
103%
100+
100%
100%
100%
100%
Flexible Term Insurance Option Rider. You may add the FTIO Rider to the policy to provide additional death benefit coverage on the life insured. The FTIO Rider provides flexible term life insurance to attained age 100 with cost of insurance charges less than or equal to those of the policy. The Rider will terminate at the earlier of attained age 100, the date the policy lapses or is surrendered, and your request to cancel the FTIO Rider.
You may schedule the death benefit amounts that will apply at specified times (the “Scheduled Death Benefits”). Scheduled Death
Benefits may be constant or varying from time to time. The Death Benefit Schedule will be shown in the policy.
The Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider is equal to (a) minus (b) but not less than zero where:
(a)the Scheduled Death Benefit for the policy month, and
(b)the Face Amount of the policy or, if greater, the policy’s Minimum Death Benefit
Even if the Term Insurance Benefit may be zero in a policy month, the Rider will not terminate.
Example. A policy is purchased for an executive as part of an employee benefit plan. The death benefit provided by the policy is to be equal to the executive’s salary of $100,000 increasing at 5% per year through age 64. Assuming the executive is currently 55, the policy will be issued with a death benefit Schedule as follows:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
1
100,000
2
105,000
3
110,250
4
115,763
5
121,551
6
127,628
7
134,010
8
140,710
9
147,746
10+
155,133
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The FTIO Rider amount will change each year as necessary to provide the benefits shown in the schedule, as follows:
Policy Year
Total
Death
Benefit
Face
Amount
Flexible
Term
Insurance
Amount
1
100,000
100000
0
2
105,000
100000
5,000
3
110,250
100000
10,250
4
115,763
100000
15,763
5
121,551
100000
21,551
6
127,628
100000
27,628
7
134,010
100000
34,010
8
140,710
100000
40,710
9
147,746
100000
47,746
10
155,133
100000
55,133
Death benefit options. You may choose either of two death benefit Options:
Death Benefit Option 1. The death benefit on any date is the Face Amount of the policy or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit, plus the Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider.
Death Benefit Option 2. The death benefit on any date is the Face Amount plus the policy value or, if greater, the Minimum Death Benefit, plus the Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider.
Changing the death benefit option. You may change the death benefit Option at any time. The change will take effect at the beginning of the next policy month that is at least 30 days after your written request is received at the Service Office. We reserve the right to limit changes that could cause the policy to fail to qualify as life insurance for tax purposes.
A change in the death benefit Option will result in a change in the Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits to avoid any change in the amount of death benefit, as follows:
Change from Option 1 to Option 2. The new Face Amount will be the Face Amount prior to the change less the policy value on the date of the change.
• The Scheduled Death Benefit amounts for dates on or after the date of the change will be the amounts scheduled prior to the change less the policy value on the date of the change.
• Coverage amounts will be reduced or eliminated in the order that they are listed in the policy until the total decrease in coverage amounts equals the decrease in Face Amount.
Example. A policy is issued with a Face amount of $100,000, death benefit Option 1, and the following schedule:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death
1
100,000
2
125,000
3
150,000
4
175,000
5+
200,000
The death benefit Option is changed to Option 2 at the beginning of policy year 3. If the policy value at the time of the change is $10,000, then the Face Amount after the change will be $90,000 (the Face Amount prior to the change less the policy value) and the Death Benefit Schedule after the change will become:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death
3
140,000
4
165,000
5+
190,000
19

Change from Option 2 to Option 1. The new Face Amount will be the Face Amount prior to the change plus the policy value on the date of the change (but the new Face Amount will be no greater than the Scheduled Death Benefit on the date of the change.)
The resulting Face Amount increase will be added to the first coverage amount listed in the policy.
The Annual Premium Target for this coverage amount will not be increased and new sales charges will not apply, however, for an increase solely due to a change in the death benefit Option.
Example. A policy is issued with a Face amount of $100,000, death benefit Option 2, and the following schedule:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death
1
100,000
2
125,000
3
150,000
4
175,000
5+
200,000
The death benefit Option is changed to Option 1 at the beginning of policy year 3. If the policy value at the time of the change is $10,000, then the Face Amount after the change will be $110,000 (the Face Amount prior to the change plus the policy value), and the Death Benefit Schedule after the change will become:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death
3
160,000
4
185,000
5+
210,000
Changing the Face Amount and scheduled death benefits. At any time, you may request an increase or decrease to the Face Amount or any Scheduled Death Benefits effective on or after the date of change. We reserve the right to limit changes that could cause the policy to fail to qualify as life insurance for tax purposes.
Increases in Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits. Increases in Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits are subject to the following conditions:
• Increases in Face Amount and Scheduled Death Benefits will require satisfactory evidence of the life insured’s insurability.
• Increases will take effect at the beginning of the next policy month after we approve the request.
• We may refuse a requested increase that would not meet our requirements for new policy issues at the time due to the life insured’s attained age or other factors.
• If the Face Amount is increased (other than as required by a death benefit Option change) then all Scheduled Death Benefits effective on or after the date of the change will be increased by the amount of the Face Amount increase.
New Sales charges for a Face Amount increase. Coverage amounts equal to the amount of the increase will be added to the policy as follows:
• First, coverage amounts that were reduced or eliminated by a prior Face Amount decrease will be restored.
• Second, if needed, a new coverage amount will be added to the policy with an Annual Premium Target and new sales charges. Any new coverage amount will be based on the life insured’s attained age and other relevant factors on the effective date of the increase.
Premiums paid on or after the increase may be attributed to the new coverage amount and result in sales charges (see “Charges and DeductionsAttribution of Premiums”).
Decreases in Face Amount and scheduled death benefits. Decreases in Face Amount and scheduled death benefits are subject to the following conditions:
• Decreases in Face Amount and scheduled death benefits will take effect at the beginning of the next policy Month which is at least 30 days after your written request is received at the Service Office.
20

• If the Face Amount is decreased then all scheduled death benefits effective on or after the date of the change will be decreased by the same amount.
• If at any time the scheduled death benefit decreases to less than the Face Amount, the Face Amount will be decreased to be equal to the scheduled death benefit at that time.
• Coverage amounts equal to the amount of the Face Amount decrease will be reduced or eliminated in the reverse order that they are listed in the policy (see “Charges and DeductionsDeductions from Premium Payments”).
Decreases in Face Amount under death benefit Option 1 due 2 to a partial withdrawal. If death benefit Option 1 is in effect when a partial withdrawal is made, the Face Amount will be decreased by an amount equal to (a) minus (b) but not less than zero, where:
(a)is the partial withdrawal amount and
(b)is the excess, if any, of the policy’s Minimum Death Benefit over its Face Amount, immediately prior to the partial withdrawal.
Decreases in Face Amount under death benefit Option 1 due to a Partial Withdrawal are subject to the following conditions:
• Coverage amounts equal to the amount of the Face Amount decrease will be reduced or eliminated in the reverse order that they are listed in the policy.
• All Scheduled Death Benefits effective on or after the date of the partial withdrawal will be decreased by the amount of the Face Amount decrease, unless you request otherwise and we approve.
Example for Face Increases and Decreases. A policy is issued with a Face Amount of $100,000, death benefit Option 1, and a Death Benefit Schedule as follows:
Policy Year
Scheduled Death
1
100,000
2
125,000
3
150,000
4
175,000
5+
200,000
Assume the following policy activity:
Activity
Effect on Policy
Change in Benefit Schedule
In policy year 2, the Face
Amount is reduced to
$80,000.
The initial Coverage amount is
reduced to $80,000.
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
2
105,000
3
130,000
4
155,000
5+
180,000
In policy year 3, the Face
Amount is increased to
$120,000
The initial coverage amount
(which earlier was reduced to
$80,000) is restored to its
original level of $100,000. A new
coverage amount for $20,000 is
added to the policy. This new
coverage amount will have its
own Annual Premium Target, and
if applicable, its own sales
charge. A portion of the future
premiums paid will be attributed
to this coverage amount to
determine the amount of the
sales charge.
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
3
170,000
4
195,000
5+
220,000
21

Activity
Effect on Policy
Change in Benefit Schedule
In policy year 4, a
Partial Withdrawal of
$30,000 is made.
The Face Amount is reduced to
$90,000. The most recent
coverage amount of $20,000 is
reduced to $0, and the initial
coverage amount is reduced to
$90,000.
Policy Year
Scheduled Death Benefit
4
165,000
5
190,000
Factors that affect the death benefit. In the case of death benefit Option 2 where the death benefit is the Face Amount plus the policy value, changes in the policy value will affect the amount of death benefit. Factors that affect the policy value are the investment performance of the variable investment accounts chosen and the charges deducted. For a discussion of how these factors affect policy value see the “Risks/Benefits Summary.” These factors do not affect the Face Amount of the policy. Therefore, the amount of death benefit under Option 1 will not be less than the Face Amount as long as the policy does not lapse.
22

Surrenders and Withdrawals
Surrender and Withdrawal
A policy may be surrendered for its net cash surrender value at any time while the life insured is living. The net cash surrender value is equal to the policy value less any surrender charge, monthly deductions due and Policy Debt. The net cash surrender value will be determined at the end of the Business Day on which we receive the policy and a written request for surrender at the Service Office. When a policy is surrendered, the insurance coverage and all other benefits under the policy will terminate. You may make a partial withdrawal of the net cash surrender value at any time.
Additional Information Regarding Surrender and Withdrawal
You may designate how the withdrawal amount is allocated among the investment account and the fixed account. If you give no instructions, the withdrawal amount will be allocated among the accounts in the same proportion as the policy value in each account bears to the net policy value.
The death benefit may be reduced as a result of a partial withdrawal.
23

Loans
Availability of Loans, Limitations and Interest
At any time while the policy is in force, you may borrow against the policy value. The policy is the only security for the loan. policy loans may have tax consequences. See “TAXES – Policy Loans.”
A policy loan will affect future policy values, since the portion of the policy value in the Loan Account will receive the loan interest credited rate rather than varying with the performance of the underlying portfolios or increasing at the fixed account interest credited rate. A policy loan may cause a policy to be more susceptible to lapse since it reduces the net cash surrender value from which monthly deductions are taken. A policy loan causes the amount payable upon death of the life insured to be reduced by the amount of outstanding Policy Debt.
The amount of any loan cannot exceed the amount that would cause the Policy Debt to equal the Policy’s Cash Surrender Value less the monthly deductions due from the date of the loan to the next policy anniversary.
Interest on the Policy Debt will accrue daily and be payable annually on the policy anniversary. The rate of interest charged will be an effective annual rate of 4%.
When a loan is made, an amount equal to the loan will be deducted from the investment accounts or the fixed account and transferred to the Loan Account. You may designate how this amount is allocated among the Accounts. If you give no instructions, the amount transferred will be allocated among the investment accounts and the fixed account in the same proportion as the policy value in each investment account and the fixed account bears to the net policy value. A transfer from an investment account will result in the cancellation of units of the underlying sub-account equal in value to the amount transferred from the investment account. However, since the Loan Account is part of the policy value, transfers made in connection with a loan will not change the policy value.
Policy value in the Loan Account will earn interest at an effective annual rate guaranteed to be at least 3.25%. We may declare a current interest rate that is greater than this, subject to change at any time. The excess of the loan interest charged rate (4%) over the loan interest credited rates will result in a net charge against the policy value with respect to any Policy Debt.
Currently we credit loan interest rates which vary by policy year as follows:
Policy Years
Current Loan
Interest
Credited Rates
Excess of Loan
Interest
Charged Rate
1-10
3.25%
0.75%
11+
3.75%
0.25%
On the first day of each policy month the difference between the Loan Account and the Policy Debt is transferred to the Loan Account from the investment accounts or the fixed account. The amount transferred will be allocated to the investment accounts and the fixed account in the same proportion as the policy value in each investment account or the fixed account bears to the net policy value.
Loan Repayments
Policy Debt may be repaid, in whole or in part, at any time prior to the death of the life insured while the policy is in force. A loan repayment amount will be credited to the Loan Account and transferred to the fixed account or the investment accounts in the same proportion as the policy value in each Account bears to the net policy value.
Amounts paid to us not specifically designated in writing as loan repayments will be treated as premiums.
24

Other Benefits Available Under the Policy
In addition to the standard death benefits associated with your policy, other standard and/or optional benefits may also be available to you. The following tables summarize information about those benefits. Information about the fees associated with each benefit included in the tables may be found in the FEE TABLE.
STANDARD BENEFITS
Name of Benefit
Purpose
Brief Description of
Restrictions/Limitations
Dollar cost averaging
Under the dollar cost averaging program, you will
designate an amount that will be transferred
monthly from one variable investment account into
any other variable investment account or a fixed
account.
We reserve the right to cease to offer this program
after written notice to you.
Asset allocation balancing
Under the asset allocation balancer program, you
will designate a percentage allocation of policy
value among variable investment accounts. We will
automatically transfer amounts among the variable
investment accounts at intervals you select
(annually, semi-annually, quarterly, or monthly) to
reestablish your chosen allocation.
We reserve the right to cease this program after
written notice to you.
OPTIONAL BENEFITS
Name of Benefit
Purpose
Brief Description of
Restrictions/Limitations
Flexible Term Insurance
Option Rider
You may add the FTIO Rider to the policy to
provide additional death benefit coverage on the
life insured. The FTIO Rider provides flexible term
life insurance to attained age 100 with cost of
insurance charges less than or equal to those of the
policy.
The Rider will terminate at the earlier of attained
age 100, the date the policy lapses or is
surrendered, and your request to cancel the FTIO
Rider.
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More About Certain Optional Benefits
When you apply for a policy, you can request any of the optional supplementary benefit riders that we then make available. Availability of any rider, the benefits it provides and the charges for it may vary by state. Our rules and procedures will govern eligibility for any rider and, in some cases, the configuration of the actual rider benefits. Each rider contains specific details that you should review before you decide to choose the rider. You may request an example illustrating the operation of any of the following optional supplementary benefit riders by contacting the Service Office at 1-800-732-5543. Charges for most riders will be deducted from the policy value. We may change these charges (or the rates that determine them), but not above any applicable maximum amount stated in your policy specifications. We may add to, delete from or modify the list of optional supplementary benefit riders.
Flexible Term Insurance Option Rider. You may add the FTIO Rider to the policy to provide additional death benefit coverage on the life insured. The FTIO Rider provides flexible term life insurance to attained age 100 with cost of insurance charges less than or equal to those of the policy. The Rider will terminate at the earlier of attained age 100, the date the policy lapses or is surrendered, and your request to cancel the FTIO Rider.
You may schedule the death benefit amounts that will apply at specified times (the “Scheduled Death Benefits”). Scheduled Death Benefits may be constant or varying from time to time. The Death Benefit Schedule will be shown in the policy.
The Term Insurance Benefit of the FTIO Rider is equal to (a) minus (b) but not less than zero where:
(a)the Scheduled Death Benefit for the policy month, and
(b)the Face Amount of the policy or, if greater, the policy’s Minimum Death Benefit
Even if the Term Insurance Benefit may be zero in a policy month, the Rider will not terminate. Example. A policy is purchased for an executive as part of an employee benefit plan. The death benefit provided by the policy is to be equal to the executive’s salary of $100,000 increasing at 5% per year through age 64. Assuming the executive is currently 55, the policy will be issued with a death benefit Schedule as follows:
Policy Year
Scheduled
Death
Benefit
1
100,000
2
105,000
3
110,250
4
115,763
5
121,551
6
127,628
7
134,010
8
140,710
9
147,746
10+
155,133
The FTIO Rider amount will change each year as necessary to provide the benefits shown in the schedule, as follows:
Policy Year
Total
Death
Benefit
Face
Amount
Flexible
Term
Insurance
Amount
1
100,000
100000
0
2
105,000
100000
5,000
3
110,250
100000
10,250
4
115,763
100000
15,763
5
121,551
100000
21,551
6
127,628
100000
27,628
7
134,010
100000
34,010
8
140,710
100000
40,710
9
147,746
100000
47,746
10
155,133
100000
55,133
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Taxes
This description of Federal income tax consequences is only a brief summary and is neither exhaustive nor authoritative. It was written to support the promotion of our products. It does not constitute legal or tax advice, and it is not intended to be used and cannot be used to avoid any penalties that may be imposed on you. Tax consequences will vary based on your own particular circumstances, and for further information you should consult a qualified tax adviser. Federal, state and local tax laws, regulations and interpretations can change from time to time. As a result, the tax consequences to you and the beneficiary may be altered, in some cases retroactively. The policy may be used in various arrangements, including non-qualified deferred compensation or salary continuation plans, split dollar insurance plans, executive bonus plans, retiree medical benefit plans and others. The tax consequences of such plans may vary depending on the particular facts and circumstances of each individual arrangement. Therefore, if the value of using the policy in any such arrangement depends in part on the tax consequences, a qualified tax adviser should be consulted for advice.
General
We are taxed as a life insurance company. Under current tax law rules, we include the investment income (exclusive of capital gains) of the Separate Account in our taxable income and take deductions for investment income credited to our policy holder reserves. We are also required to capitalize and amortize certain costs instead of deducting those costs when they are incurred. We do not currently charge the Separate Account for any resulting income tax costs, other than a charge we may impose against the Separate Account to compensate us for the cost of a delay in the deductibility of deferred acquisition costs (the “DAC tax” adjustment) pursuant to section 848 of the Internal Revenue Code. We also claim certain tax credits or deductions relating to foreign taxes paid and dividends received by the series funds. These benefits can be material. We do not pass these benefits through to the Separate Account, principally because: (i) the deductions and credits are allowed to us and not the policy owners under applicable tax law; and (ii) the deductions and credits do not represent investment return on the Separate Account assets that is passed through to policy owners.
The policies permit us to deduct a charge for any taxes we incur that are attributable to the operation or existence of the policies or the Separate Account. Currently, we do not anticipate making any specific charge for such taxes other than any DAC tax charge and premium taxes where applicable. If the level of the current taxes increases, however, or is expected to increase in the future, we reserve the right to make a charge in the future.
Death Benefit Proceeds and Other Policy Distributions
Generally, death benefits paid under policies such as yours are not subject to income tax unless policy ownership has been transferred in exchange for payment. Earnings on your policy value are ordinarily not subject to income tax as long as we don’t pay them out to you. If we do pay out any amount of your policy value upon surrender or partial withdrawal, all or part of that distribution would generally be treated as a return of the premiums you’ve paid and not subjected to income tax. Any portion not treated as a return of your premiums would be includible in your income.
Please note that certain distributions associated with a reduction in death benefit or other policy benefits within the first fifteen years after issuance of the policy are ordinarily taxable in whole or in part. Amounts you borrow are generally not taxable to you.
However, some of the tax rules change if your policy becomes a modified endowment contract. This can happen if you’ve paid premiums in excess of limits prescribed by the tax laws. In that case, additional taxes and penalties may be payable for policy distributions of any kind, including loans. (See “7-pay Premium Limit and Modified Endowment Contract Status” below.)
We expect the policy to receive the same Federal income and estate tax treatment as fixed benefit life insurance policies. Section 7702 of the Internal Revenue Code defines a life insurance contract for Federal tax purposes. For a policy to be treated as a life insurance contract, it must satisfy either the cash value accumulation test or the guideline premium test. These tests limit the amount of premium that you may pay into the policy. We will monitor compliance with these standards. If we determine that a policy does not satisfy section 7702, we may take whatever steps are appropriate and reasonable to bring it into compliance with section 7702.
If the policy complies with section 7702, the death benefit proceeds under the policy ordinarily should be excludible from the beneficiary’s gross income under section 101 of the Internal Revenue Code. (As noted above, a transfer of the policy for valuable consideration may limit the exclusion of death benefits from the beneficiary’s income.)
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Increases in policy value as a result of interest or investment experience will not be subject to Federal income tax unless and until values are received through actual or deemed distributions. In general, unless the policy is a modified endowment contract, the owner will be taxed only on the amount of distributions that exceed the premiums paid under the policy. An exception to this general rule occurs in the case of a decrease in the policy’s death benefit or any other change that reduces benefits under the policy in the first fifteen years after the policy is issued and that results in a cash distribution to the policy owner. Changes that reduce benefits include partial withdrawals, death benefit option changes, and distributions required to keep the policy in compliance with section 7702. For purposes of this rule any distribution within the two years immediately before a reduction in benefits will also be treated as if it were a result of the reduction. A cash distribution that reduces policy benefits will be taxed in whole or in part (to the extent of any gain in the policy) under rules prescribed in section 7702. The taxable amount is subject to limits prescribed in section 7702(f)(7). Any taxable distribution will be ordinary income to the owner (rather than capital gain).
Distributions for tax purposes include amounts received upon surrender or partial withdrawals, and may include the charges for certain supplementary benefit riders. You may also be deemed to have received a distribution for tax purposes if you assign all or part of your policy rights or change your policy’s ownership. . If you use policy value to pay down a policy loan, the amount so applied will be treated as a distribution
It is possible that, despite our monitoring, a policy might fail to qualify as a life insurance contract under the Internal Revenue Code. This could happen, for example, if we inadvertently failed to return to you any premium payments that were in excess of amounts permitted under section 7702, or if any of the funds failed to meet certain investment diversification or other requirements of the Internal Revenue Code. If this were to occur, you would be subject to income tax on the income credited to the policy from the date of issue to the date of the disqualification and for subsequent periods.
Tax consequences of ownership or receipt of policy proceeds under Federal, state and local estate, inheritance, gift and other tax laws will depend on the circumstances of each owner or beneficiary. If the person insured by the policy is also its owner, either directly or indirectly through an entity such as a revocable trust, the death benefit will be includible in his or her estate for purposes of the Federal estate tax. If the owner is not the person insured, the value of the policy will be includible in the owner’s estate upon his or her death. Even if ownership has been transferred, the death proceeds or the policy value may be includible in the former owner’s estate if the transfer occurred less than three years before the former owner’s death or if the former owner retained certain kinds of control over the policy. You should consult your tax adviser regarding these possible tax consequences.
Because there may be unfavorable tax consequences (including recognition of taxable income and the loss of income tax-free treatment for any death benefit payable to the beneficiary), you should consult a qualified tax adviser prior to changing the policy’s ownership or making any assignment of ownership interests.
Policy Loans
We expect that, except as noted below (see “7-pay Premium Limit and Modified Endowment Contract Status”), loans received under the policy will be treated as indebtedness of an owner and that no part of any loan will constitute income to the owner. However, if the policy terminates for any reason other than the payment of the death benefit, an amount equal to any outstanding loan that was not previously considered income will be treated as if it had been distributed to the owner upon such termination. This could result in a considerable tax bill. Under certain circumstances involving large amounts of outstanding loans, you might find yourself having to choose between high premiums required to keep your policy from lapsing and a significant tax burden if you allow the lapse to occur.
Diversification Rules and Ownership of the Separate Account
Your policy will not qualify for the tax benefits of a life insurance contract unless the Separate Account follows certain rules requiring diversification of investments underlying the policy. In addition, the rules require that the policy owner not have “investor control” over the underlying assets.
In certain circumstances, the owner of a variable life insurance policy may be considered the owner, for Federal income tax purposes, of the assets of the Separate Account used to support the policy. In those circumstances, income and gains from the Separate Account assets would be includible in the policy owner’s gross income. The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) has stated in published rulings that a variable policy owner will be considered the owner of Separate Account assets if the policy owner possesses incidents of ownership in those assets, such as the ability to exercise investment control over the assets. A Treasury Decision issued in 1986 (T.D. 8101) stated that guidance would be issued in the form of regulations or rulings on
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“the extent to which policyholders may direct their investments to particular sub-accounts of a Separate Account without being treated as owners of the underlying assets.” As of the date of this prospectus, no comprehensive guidance on this point has been issued. In Rev. Rul. 2003-91, however, the IRS ruled that a contract holder would not be treated as the owner of assets underlying a variable life insurance or annuity contract despite the owner’s ability to allocate funds among as many as twenty subaccounts.
The ownership rights under your policy are similar to, but different in certain respects from, those described in IRS rulings in which it was determined that policyholders were not owners of Separate Account assets. Since you have greater flexibility in allocating premiums and policy values than was the case in those rulings, it is possible that you would be treated as the owner of your policy’s proportionate share of the assets of the Separate Account.
We do not know what future Treasury Department regulations or other guidance may require. We cannot guarantee that the funds will be able to operate as currently described in the series funds’ prospectuses, or that a series fund will not have to change any fund’s investment objectives or policies. We have reserved the right to modify your policy if we believe doing so will prevent you from being considered the owner of your policy’s proportionate share of the assets of the Separate Account, but we are under no obligation to do so.
7-pay Premium Limit and Modified Endowment Contract Status
At the time of policy issuance, we will determine whether the Planned Premium schedule will exceed the 7-pay limit discussed below. If so, our standard procedures prohibit issuance of the policy unless you sign a form acknowledging that fact.
The 7-pay limit at any time during the first seven contract years is the total of net level premiums that would have been payable at or before that time under a comparable fixed policy that would be fully “paid-up” after the payment of seven equal annual premiums. “Paid-up” means that no further premiums would be required to continue the coverage in force until maturity, based on certain prescribed assumptions. If the total premiums paid at any time during the first seven policy years exceed the 7-pay limit, the policy will be treated as a modified endowment contract, which can have adverse tax consequences.
Policies classified as modified endowment contracts are subject to the following tax rules:
• First, all withdrawals from such a policy are treated as ordinary income subject to tax up to the amount equal to the excess (if any) of the policy value immediately before the withdrawal over the investment in the policy at such time. If you own any other modified endowment contracts issued to you in the same calendar year by the same insurance company or its affiliates, their values will be combined with the value of the policy from which you take the withdrawal for purposes of determining how much of the withdrawal is taxable as ordinary income.
• Second, loans taken from or secured by such a policy and assignments or pledges of any part of its value are treated as partial withdrawals from the policy and taxed accordingly. Past-due loan interest that is added to the loan amount is treated as an additional loan.
• Third, a 10% additional penalty tax is imposed on the portion of any distribution (including distributions on surrender) from, or loan taken from or secured by, such a policy that is included in income except where the distribution or loan:
• is made on or after the date on which the policy owner attains age 59½ or
• is attributable to the policy owner becoming disabled.
These exceptions to the 10% additional tax do not apply in situations where the policy is not owned by an individual.
Furthermore, any time there is a “material change” in a policy, the policy will begin a new 7-pay testing period as if it were a newly- issued policy. The material change rules for determining whether a policy is a modified endowment contract are complex. In general, however, the determination of whether a policy will be a modified endowment contract after a material change depends upon the relationship among the death benefit of the policy at the time of such change, the policy value at the time of the change, and the additional premiums paid into the policy during the seven years starting with the date on which the material change occurs.
Moreover, under a policy insuring a single life, if there is a reduction in benefits (such as a reduction in the death benefit or the reduction or cancellation of certain rider benefits) during a 7-pay testing period, the 7-pay limit will generally be recalculated based on the reduced benefits and the policy will be re-tested from the beginning of the 7-pay testing period using
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the lower limit. If the premiums paid to date at any point during the 7-pay testing period are greater than the recalculated 7-pay limit, the policy will become a modified endowment contract. If your policy is a survivorship policy, a reduction in benefits under the policy at any time will require re-testing. For such a policy the 7-pay limit will generally be recalculated based on the reduced benefits and the policy will be re-tested, using the lower limit, from the date it was issued. You should consult your tax adviser if you have questions regarding the possible impact of the 7-pay limit on your policy.
If your policy is issued as a result of an exchange subject to section 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code, it may be considered to be a modified endowment contract if the death benefit under the new policy is smaller than the death benefit under the exchanged policy, or if you reduce coverage in your new policy after it is issued. Therefore, if you desire to reduce the face amount as part of a 1035 exchange, a qualified tax adviser should be consulted for advice. A new policy issued in exchange for a modified endowment contract will also be a modified endowment contract regardless of any change in the death benefit.
All modified endowment contracts issued by the same insurer (or its affiliates) to the same owner during any calendar year generally are required to be treated as one contract for the purpose of applying the rules on taxation of withdrawals from modified endowment contracts. You should consult your tax adviser if you have questions regarding the possible impact of the 7-pay limit on your policy.
Corporate and H.R. 10 Retirement Plans
The policy may be acquired in connection with the funding of retirement plans satisfying the qualification requirements of section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code. If so, the Internal Revenue Code provisions relating to such plans and life insurance benefits thereunder should be carefully scrutinized. We are not responsible for compliance with the terms of any such plan or with the requirements of applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.
Withholding
To the extent that policy distributions to you are taxable, they are generally subject to withholding for your Federal income tax liability. However if you reside in the United States, you can generally choose not to have tax withheld from distributions. Electing to have no withholding will not reduce your tax liability and may expose you to penalties under the rules governing payment of estimated taxes.
Life Insurance Purchases by Residents of Puerto Rico
In Rev. Rul. 2004-75, 2004-31 I.R.B. 109, the Internal Revenue Service ruled that income received by residents of Puerto Rico under a life insurance policy issued by a United States company is U.S.-source income that is subject to United States Federal income tax.
Life Insurance Purchases by Non-resident Aliens
If you are not a U.S. citizen, U.S. resident alien or other U.S. person, you will generally be subject to U.S. Federal withholding tax on taxable distributions from life insurance policies at a 30% rate, unless a lower treaty rate applies. In addition, you may be subject to state and/or municipal taxes and taxes imposed by your country of citizenship or residence. You should consult with a qualified tax adviser before purchasing a policy.
Life Insurance Owned by Citizens or Residents Living Abroad
If you are a U.S. citizen or permanent resident living outside the United States, you are still subject to income taxation by the United States. Since many countries tax on the basis of domicile, you may also be subject to tax in the country or territory in which you are living. The tax-deferred accumulation of gain that a life insurance policy provides under United States tax law may not be available under the tax laws of the country in which you are living. If you are living outside the United States or planning to do so, you should consult with a qualified tax adviser before purchasing or retaining ownership of a policy. If your policy is issued as a result of an exchange of a policy owned or issued outside the United States, the country or territory in which you reside may still tax you on the surrender of the policy replaced through the exchange. You should consult with a qualified tax adviser before exchanging your policy issued outside of the United States for one issued within the United States.
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Principal Risks of Investing in the Policy
Lapse Risk
If the net cash surrender value is insufficient to pay the charges when due your policy can terminate (i.e., “lapse”). For example, this can happen because you haven’t paid enough premium, because the performance of the variable investment or general account options you’ve chosen has been poor, or because of a combination of all factors. Since withdrawals and policy charges reduce your policy value, these also increase the risk of lapse. Policy loans also increase the risk of lapse. There is no guarantee that your policy will not lapse even if you pay your planned premium.
Investment Risk/Risk of Loss
The policy offers a number of variable investment accounts, as listed in the APPENDIX. The investment performance of any variable investment account may be good or bad, and you may lose money on amounts you invest in a policy. Your policy value will increase or decrease based on the investment performance of the variable investment accounts you’ve chosen. The variable investment accounts cover a broad spectrum of investment styles and strategies, some variable investment accounts are riskier than others. These risks (and potential rewards) are discussed in detail in the prospectuses of the portfolios. The death benefit may also increase or decrease with investment experience.
An investment in a policy is also subject to risks related to John Hancock USA, including that the obligations (including under the fixed account option), guarantees, or benefits are subject to the claims-paying ability of John Hancock USA. Information about John Hancock USA, including its financial strength ratings, is available upon request from your John Hancock USA representative. Our current financial strength ratings can also be obtained by contacting the Service Office at 1-800-732-5543.
Transfer Risk
There is a risk that you will not be able to transfer your policy value from one variable investment account to another because of limitations on the dollar amount or frequency of transfers you can make. The limitations on transfers out of the fixed account are more restrictive than those that apply to transfers out of variable investment accounts. If you purchase certain supplementary benefit riders you will be subject to special transfer restrictions.
To discourage market timing and disruptive trading activity, we impose restrictions on transfers and reserve the right to change, suspend or terminate telephone, facsimile and internet transaction privileges. While we seek to identify and prevent disruptive trading activity, it may not always be possible to do so. Therefore, no assurance can be given that the restrictions we impose will be successful in preventing all disruptive trading and avoiding harm to long term investors.
Early Surrender or Withdrawal Risk/ Not a Short-Term Investment
This policy is not a short-term investment and is not appropriate for an investor who needs ready access to cash. Depending on the policy value at the time you are considering surrender, there may be little or no surrender value payable to you.
Tax Risks
In order for you to receive the tax benefits extended to life insurance under the Code, your policy must comply with certain requirements of the Code. We will monitor your policy for compliance with these requirements, but a policy might fail to qualify as life insurance in spite of our monitoring, which can have adverse tax consequences. If the policy were determined not to qualify as life insurance under the Code, you would be taxed on any income or gains those assets generate. In other words, you would lose the value of the so-called “tax-deferred inside build-up” that is a major benefit of life insurance.
There is a tax risk associated with policy loans. Although no part of a loan is treated as income to you when the loan is made unless your policy is a “modified endowment contract,” surrender or lapse of the policy with a loan outstanding would result in the loan being treated as a distribution at the time of lapse or surrender. This could result in a considerable tax bill. Under certain circumstances involving large amounts of outstanding loans and an insured person of advanced age, you might find yourself having to choose between high premium requirements to keep your policy from lapsing and a significant tax burden if you allow the lapse to occur.
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Tax consequences of ownership or receipt of policy proceeds (including surrender or withdrawal proceeds) under Federal, state and local estate, inheritance, gift and other tax laws can vary greatly depending upon the circumstances of each owner or beneficiary. There can also be unfavorable tax consequences on such things as the change of policy ownership or assignment of ownership interests. For these and all the other reasons mentioned above, we recommend you consult with a qualified tax adviser before buying the policy and before exercising certain rights under the policy.
Cybersecurity Risks
Our business and operations are highly dependent upon the effective operation of our computer systems and those of our third-party business partners. As a result, there are potential operational and information security risks associated with attack, damage, or unauthorized access to the technologies and systems on which our business depends. These risks include, among other things, the unauthorized access, theft, loss, misuse, corruption, and destruction of data maintained online or digitally, denial of service on websites and other operational disruption, and unauthorized release of confidential customer information. Cyber-attacks affecting us, any third-party administrator, the underlying portfolios, intermediaries, and other affiliated or third-party service providers may adversely affect us and your policy value. For instance, cyber-attacks may interfere with the processing of actions taken on your policy, including the processing of transactions and orders from our website or with the underlying portfolios, impact our ability to calculate unit values or an underlying portfolio to calculate a net asset value, or cause the release and possible destruction of confidential customer or business information. Cybersecurity risks may also impact the issuers of securities in which the underlying portfolios invest, which may cause the portfolios underlying your policy to lose value. While measures have been implemented that are designed to reduce cybersecurity risks, there can be no guarantee or assurance that we, the underlying portfolios, or our service providers will not suffer losses affecting your policy due to cyber-attacks or information security breaches in the future.
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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING THE POLICY
Charges and Deductions
Under the policies, we deduct the charges discussed immediately below under “Deductions from premium payments” and “Deductions from policy value.” Although the Fee Table in this prospectus provides disclosure about the maximum rates we are permitted to charge, we currently deduct some of the charges at less than those maximum rates. As a general matter, however, we also are permitted to increase or decrease the rate at which we are deducting any charge, provided that the rate can never exceed the maximum set forth in your policy (including in any applicable supplementary benefit rider) and as disclosed in the Fee Table. By contacting the John Hancock USA Service Office or your John Hancock USA representative at any time, you can obtain information about the then-current rate of any charges that are applicable to your particular circumstances and/or obtain a personalized illustration that will demonstrate the manner in which those specific current charges impact the values under your policy.
Deductions from premium payments.
Premium charge – We will deduct a Premium Charge as a percentage of each premium payment that is guaranteed never to exceed 2.0%. Currently, we waive this charge in policy years 11 and later and charge 0%. The charge is intended to cover a portion of the aggregate amount of various taxes and fees we pay to federal, state and local governments. It is not based on the actual premium tax rate of your state of residence or any other specific tax.
Sales charge – The sales charge is intended to cover a portion of our costs of marketing and distributing the policies.
Attribution of Premiums – An Annual Premium Target is associated with each coverage amount. Annual Premium Targets are based on the coverage amount and the life insured’s attained age, sex and smoking status on the effective date of the coverage amount. The Annual Premium Targets are listed with the coverage amounts in the policy.
Premium payments will be attributed to coverage amounts that have been in effect for less than 5 years. Attribution will begin with the first applicable coverage amount that is listed in the policy. The sum of all premium amounts attributed to a coverage amount in a coverage year is limited to the Annual Premium Target shown in the policy. Premium amounts that exceed the Annual Premium Target will be attributed to the next listed coverage amount, up to its own Annual Premium Target. Attribution will continue in this manner until either the entire premium is attributed to coverage amounts or the Annual Premium Target is exceeded for all applicable coverage amounts.
Sales charge. We deduct a sales charge from all premium amounts attributed to a coverage amount designated as having a sales charge. The sales charge is a percentage of premiums guaranteed never to exceed the percentages below.
Currently we are charging these percentages.
Coverage Year
Percentage
1
13.00%
2
6.25%
3
3.50%
4
2.50%
5
0.50%
6
0.50%
7+
0.00%
Deductions from policy value.
Administration charge – A monthly charge to help cover our administrative costs. This is a flat dollar charge of $12. This charge is intended to cover certain administrative expenses associated with the policy, including maintaining policy records, collecting premiums and processing death claims, surrender and withdrawal requests and various changes permitted under a policy.
Cost of insurance charge – A monthly charge for the cost of insurance is paid to the Company and is determined by multiplying a cost of insurance rate by the net amount at risk at the beginning of each policy month.
Death Benefit Option 1. The net amount at risk is equal to the greater of zero, or (a) minus (b), where
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(a)is the applicable death benefit amount on the first day of the policy month, divided by 1.0024663; and
(b)is the Policy Value attributed to that death benefit amount on the first day of the policy month.
Death Benefit Option 2. The net amount at risk is equal to the Face Amount of insurance.
Cost of insurance rates and net amounts at risk are determined separately for each coverage amount and for the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount (the Face Amount is the sum of the coverage amounts).
Attribution of policy value to net amounts at risk – To determine the net amounts at risk, the policy value will be attributed to coverage amounts in the order listed in the policy. The amount of policy value attributed to a coverage amount will be limited to the amount that results in zero net amount at risk, and any excess policy value will then be attributed to the next listed coverage amount. Attribution will continue in this manner until either the entire policy value is attributed or the end of the list of coverage amounts is reached. Any remaining policy value will then be attributed to the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount.
Cost of insurance rates – Cost of insurance rates are determined separately for each coverage amount and the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount. There are different current cost of insurance rate bases for:
• Coverage amounts having sales charges, and
• The excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount, including any Term Insurance Benefit under the FTIO Rider.
The cost of insurance rate in a specific policy month for an applicable death benefit amount will depend on:
• the cost of insurance rate basis for the applicable death benefit amount,
• the life insured’s attained age, sex (unless unisex rates are required by law) and smoking status on the effective date of the applicable death benefit amount,
• the underwriting class of the applicable death benefit amount,
• the coverage year, or policy year for the excess of the death benefit over the Face Amount,
• any extra charges for substandard ratings, as stated in the policy.
Since the net amount at risk for death benefit Option 1 is based on a formula that includes as factors the policy value, the net amount at risk is affected by the investment performance of the underlying investment options chosen, payment of premiums and charges assessed.
Cost of insurance rates will generally increase with the life insured’s age and the coverage year.
Cost of insurance rates reflect our expectation as to future mortality experience. They are also intended to cover our general costs of providing the policy, to the extent that these costs are not covered by other charges. Current cost of insurance rates may be changed by us on a basis that does not unfairly discriminate within the class of lives insured.
Guaranteed maximum cost of insurance rates. In no event will the cost of insurance rates we charge exceed the guaranteed maximum rates set forth in the policy, except to the extent that an extra charge is imposed for a substandard rating. The guaranteed rates are the based on 1980 Commissioners Standard Ordinary Sex Distinct (unless unisex rates are required by law) ANB Aggregate Ultimate Mortality Tables. Current cost of insurance rates may be less than the guaranteed rates.
Asset-based risk charge – We assess a daily charge against amounts in the investment accounts. This charge is intended to compensate us for insurance risks we assume under the policy, such as benefit payments and expenses that are higher than we expected. We will realize a gain from this charge to the extent it is not needed to provide benefits and pay expenses under the policy.
The charge is a percentage of amounts in the investment accounts, which will reduce Unit Values of the sub-accounts. The charge is guaranteed never to exceed an annual rate of 0.50%. Currently, we charge the following rates:
PolicyYear
Annual Rate
1-10
0.45%
11+
0.25%
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Supplementary benefit rider charges – A charge for any supplementary insurance benefits added to the policy by means of a rider. Maximum charges for the various riders are shown in the Fee Table above under “Transaction Fees” or “Periodic Charges Other than Annual Portfolio Expenses,” as appropriate. These charges are also specified in the rider’s provisions or the policy specifications. You can obtain information about the specific charges applicable to you from your John Hancock USA representative.
Loan interest charge – We will charge interest on any amount you borrow from your policy. The interest charged on any loan is an effective annual rate of 3.75% in the first ten policy years and 3.00% thereafter. However, we reserve the right to increase the percentage after the tenth policy year to as much as 3.25%.
Transfer fee – We currently do not impose a fee upon transfers of policy value among the variable investment accounts but reserve the right to impose a fee of up to $25.00 for any transfer beyond an annual limit (which will not be less than 12) to compensate us for the costs of processing these transfers.
Charges at the portfolio level – The portfolios must pay investment management fees and other operating expenses from portfolio assets. These fees and expenses are different for each portfolio and reduce the investment return of each portfolio. Therefore, they also indirectly reduce the return you will earn on any variable investment accounts you select. Expenses of the portfolios are not fixed or specified under the terms of the policy, and those expenses may vary from year to year. See APPENDIX.
Additional Information About How Certain Policy Charges Work
The policy is designed for employers and other sponsoring organizations that may purchase multiple policies as a Case. The size or nature of the Case may result in expected savings of sales, underwriting, administrative or other costs. If so, we expect to offer reductions of policy charges and enhancements of surrender value. Eligibility for reductions and enhancements and the amounts available will be determined by a number of factors, including the number of lives to be insured, the total premiums expected to be paid, total assets under management for the policy owner, the nature of the relationship among the lives insured, the purpose for which the policies are being purchased, expected persistency of the individual policies, and any other circumstances which we believe to be relevant to the expected reduction of our expenses. Some of reductions and enhancements may be guaranteed and others may be subject to restrictions or to withdrawal or modification, on a uniform case basis. We may change the nature and amount of reductions and enhancements available from time to time. Reductions and enhancements will be determined in a way that is not unfairly discriminatory to policy owners.
Other Charges We Could Impose in the Future
Currently, we make no specific charge for any federal, state, or local taxes that we incur that may be attributable to such Account or to the policy. We reserve the right in the future to make a charge for any such tax or other economic burden resulting from the application of tax laws that we determines to be attributable to the Separate Account or to the policy.
Commissions Paid to Dealers
We pay compensation to broker-dealers for the promotion and sale of the policies, and for providing ongoing service in relation to policies that have already been purchased. We may also pay a limited number of broker-dealers commissions or overrides to “wholesale” the policies; that is, to provide marketing support and training services to the broker-dealer firms that do the actual selling. The compensation paid is not expected to exceed 30% of target premium paid in the first policy year, 5% of target paid in years 2-5, and 2.5% paid thereafter. Compensation on any premium paid in excess of target premium in any year will not exceed 2.5%. Broker-dealers may also receive a service fee of up to $100 per policy per year and an asset trail of up to .10%. This compensation schedule is exclusive of additional compensation and revenue sharing and inclusive of overrides and expense allowances paid to broker-dealers for sale of the policies (not including riders). Under their own arrangements, broker-dealers determine how much of any amounts received from us is to be paid to their registered representatives.
To the extent permitted by SEC and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”) rules and other applicable laws and regulations, we may enter into special compensation or reimbursement arrangements (“revenue sharing”), either directly or through JH Distributors, with selected broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries. In consideration of these
35

arrangements, a firm may feature our policy in its sales system, give us preferential access to sales staff, or allow JH Distributors or its affiliates to participate in conferences, seminars or other programs attended by the firm’s sales force. We hope to benefit from these revenue sharing and other arrangements through increased sales of our policies.
Selling broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries may receive, directly or indirectly, additional payments in the form of cash, other compensation or reimbursement. These additional compensation or reimbursement arrangements may include, for example, payments in connection with the firm’s “due diligence” examination of the policies, payments for providing conferences or seminars, sales or training programs for invited registered representatives and other employees, payment for travel expenses, including lodging, incurred by registered representatives and other employees for such seminars or training programs, seminars for the public or client seminars, advertising and sales campaigns regarding the policies, payments to assist a firm in connection with its systems, operations and marketing expenses and/or other events or activities sponsored by the firms. We may contribute to, as well as sponsor, various educational programs, sales promotions, and/or other contests in which participating firms and their sales persons may receive gifts and prizes such as merchandise, cash or other rewards as may be permitted under FINRA rules and other applicable laws and regulations.
You should contact your registered representative for more information on compensation arrangements in connection with your purchase of a policy. We provide additional information on special compensation or reimbursement arrangements involving broker- dealers and other financial intermediaries in the Statement of Additional Information (the “SAI”).
Lapse and Reinstatement
Lapse. A policy will go into default if at the beginning of any policy month the policy’s net cash surrender value would be zero or below after deducting the monthly deductions then due. Therefore, a policy could lapse eventually if increases in policy value (prior to deduction of policy charges) are not sufficient to cover policy charges.
Reinstatement. By making a written request, you can reinstate a policy that has gone into default and terminated at any time within the five-year period following the date of termination subject to the following conditions:
(a)You must provide to us evidence of the insured person’s insurability that is satisfactory to us; and
(b)You must pay a premium equal to the amount that was required to bring the policy out of default immediately prior to termination, plus the amount needed to keep the policy in force for at least the next three policy months.
If the reinstatement is approved, the date of reinstatement will be the later of the date we approve your request or the date the required payment is received at our Service Office. The policy value on the date of reinstatement, prior to the crediting of any net premium paid in connection with the reinstatement, will be equal to the policy value on the date the policy terminated. Any policy debt not paid upon termination of a policy will be reinstated if the policy is reinstated.
Generally, the suicide exclusion and incontestability provisions will apply from the effective date of reinstatement. A surrendered policy cannot be reinstated.
Variations
Insurance laws and regulations apply to us in every state in which our policies are sold. As a result, terms and conditions of your insurance coverage may vary depending on where you purchase a policy. Specific variations from the information appearing in this prospectus which are required due to insurance laws and regulations are contained in your policy, or in riders or endorsements attached to your policy. You should refer to your policy for these state specific features.
We may vary the charges and other terms of our policies where special circumstances result in sales or administrative expenses, mortality risks or other risks that are different from those normally associated with the policies, subject to the maximum charges described in this prospectus. For example, with respect to policies issued to a class of associated individuals or to a trustee, employer or similar entity where we anticipate that the sales to the members of the class will result in lower than normal sales or administrative expenses, lower taxes or lower risks to us, we may offer the policies with reduced charges or with additional or enhanced features or benefits. We will make these programs available in accordance with our established administrative procedures in effect at the time of the application for a policy. The factors we consider in determining the eligibility of a particular group for such a program are: (i) the nature of the association and its organizational framework; (ii) the method by which sales will be made to the members of the class; (iii) the facility with which premiums will be collected from the associated individuals and the association’s capabilities with respect to administrative tasks; (iv) the anticipated lapse and surrender rates of the policies; (v) the size of the class of associated individuals and the number of years it has been in
36

existence; (vi) the aggregate amount of premiums paid; and (vii) any other such circumstances which result in a reduction in sales or administrative expenses, lower taxes or lower risks. Any reduction in charges or feature or benefit enhancement will be reasonable and will apply uniformly to all prospective policy investors in the class and will not unfairly discriminate against any owner.
Policy or Separate Account Changes
We reserve the right to make any changes in the policy necessary to ensure the policy is within the definition of life insurance under the Federal tax laws and is in compliance with any changes in Federal or state tax laws.
In our policies, we reserve the right to make certain changes if they would serve the best interests of policy owners or would be appropriate in carrying out the purposes of the policies. These changes include the following:
• Changes necessary to comply with or obtain or continue exemptions under the Federal securities laws
• Adding or removing fixed accounts or variable investment accounts
• Combining variable investment accounts
• Closing the variable investment accounts to new allocations or transfers
• Changes in the form of organization of any separate account
Any such changes will be made only to the extent permitted by applicable laws and only in the manner permitted by such laws. When required by law, we will obtain your approval of the changes and the approval of any appropriate regulatory authority.
We also reserve the right, subject to compliance with applicable law, including approval of owners if so required, (1) to transfer assets determined by John Hancock USA to be associated with the class of policies to which your policy belongs from the Separate Account to another separate account or subaccount, (2) to deregister the Separate Account under the 1940 Act, (3) to substitute for the fund shares held by a subaccount any other investment permitted by law, and (4) to take any action necessary to comply with or obtain any exemptions from the 1940 Act. Any such change will be made only if, in our judgment, the change would best serve the interests of owners of policies in your policy class or would be appropriate in carrying out the purposes of such policies. We would notify owners of any of the foregoing changes and to the extent legally required, obtain approval of affected owners and any regulatory body prior thereto. Such notice and approval, however, may not be legally required in all cases.
When We Pay Policy Proceeds
We will ordinarily pay any death benefit, withdrawal, surrender value or loan within seven days after we receive the last required form or request (and, with respect to the death benefit, any other documentation that may be required). You may choose to receive proceeds from the policy as a single sum. If we do not have information about the desired manner of payment within seven days after the date we receive documentation of the insured person’s death, we will pay the proceeds as a single sum. As permitted by state law and our current administrative procedures, death claim proceeds may be placed into an interest-bearing John Hancock retained asset account in the beneficiary’s name. The interest earned in a John Hancock retained asset account is normally subject to income tax. You should consult with your tax advisor if you have any questions regarding taxation of the interest earned. We will provide the beneficiary with a checkbook, so checks may be written for all or a part of the proceeds. The retained asset account is part of our general account and is subject to the claims of our creditors. It is not a bank account and it is not insured by the FDIC. We may receive a benefit from managing proceeds held in a retained asset account. Alternatively, you can elect to have proceeds of $1,000 or more applied to any of the other payment options we may offer at the time. You cannot choose an option if the monthly payments under the option would be less than $50. We will issue a supplementary agreement when the proceeds are applied to any alternative payment option. That agreement will spell out terms of the option in full. Please contact our Service Office for more information.
We reserve the right to defer payment of that portion of your policy value that is attributable to a premium payment made by check for a reasonable period of time (not to exceed fifteen days) to allow the check to clear the banking system. We will not delay payment longer than necessary for us to verify a check has cleared the banking system.
37

We reserve the right to defer payment of any death benefit, loan or other distribution that is derived from a variable investment account if (1) the NYSE is closed (other than customary weekend and holiday closings) or trading on the NYSE is restricted; (2) an emergency exists, as determined by the SEC, as a result of which disposal of securities is not reasonably practicable or it is not reasonably practicable to fairly determine the policy value; or (3) the SEC by order permits the delay for the protection of owners. Transfers and allocations of policy value among the variable investment accounts may also be postponed under these circumstances. If we need to defer calculation of separate account values for any of the foregoing reasons, all delayed transactions will be processed at the next values that we do compute.
State laws allow us to defer payment of any portion of the net cash surrender value derived from the fixed account for up to six months. These laws were enacted many years ago to help insurance companies in the event of a liquidity crisis.
Coverage at and After Age 100
At and after the policy anniversary nearest the insured person’s 100th birthday, the following will occur:
• We will stop any monthly deduction charges.
• We will stop accepting any premium payments.
• We will no longer process withdrawals.
• We will continue to credit interest to a fixed account. • We will not allow any new loans and loan interest will continue to be charged if there is an outstanding loan.
38

General Description of Registrant, Depositor and Portfolios
Depositor
Your policy is issued by John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.), 200 Berkeley St., Boston, MA 02116.
Registrant
The “registrant” of the policies with the SEC is the John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N, a separate account operated by us under Michigan law (the “Separate Account”). Each subaccount of the Separate Account invests its assets in one of the portfolios shown in the APPENDIX.
The Separate Account’s assets are our property. Each policy provides that amounts we hold in the Separate Account pursuant to the policies cannot be reached by any other persons who may have claims against us and can’t be used to pay any obligations of John Hancock USA other than those arising out of policies that use the Separate Account. Income, gains and losses credited to, or charged against, the Separate Account reflect the Separate Account’s own investment experience and not the investment experience of John Hancock USA’s other assets. All obligations under the policies (including under any fixed account options), guarantees, or benefits are obligations of John Hancock USA and are subject to its claims paying ability.
We normally compute policy values for each business day as of the close of the NYSE on that day (usually 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). In case of emergency or other disruption resulting in the NYSE closing at a time other than the regularly scheduled close, the close of our business day may be the regularly scheduled close of the NYSE or another time permitted by the SEC and applicable regulations. Over time, the amount you’ve invested in any variable investment account will increase or decrease the same as if you had invested the same amount directly in the corresponding portfolio and had reinvested all of that portfolios’ dividends and distributions in additional portfolio shares, except that we will deduct certain additional charges which will reduce your policy value. We describe these charges under “Charges at the portfolio level.” For certain policy years, we also will apply a policy credit to your policy value.
Portfolios
Information regarding each portfolio, including (i) its name; (ii) its investment objective; (iii) its investment adviser and any sub- investment adviser; (iv) current expenses; and (v) performance is available in the APPENDIX to this prospectus. Each portfolio has issued a prospectus that contains more detailed information about the portfolio. You can obtain the prospectus (hard copy or electronic) and additional information about any portfolio, at the addresses or phone number set forth in the first paragraph of the APPENDIX. On each business day, shares of each series are purchased or redeemed by us for each subaccount based on, among other things, the amount of net premiums allocated to the subaccount, distributions reinvested, and transfers to, from and among subaccounts, all to be effected as of that date. Such purchases and redemptions are effected at each series fund’s net asset value per share determined for that same date. A “business day” is any date on which the NYSE is open for trading.
We will purchase and redeem series fund shares for the Separate Account at their net asset value without any sales or redemption charges. Shares of a series fund represent an interest in one of the funds of the series fund which corresponds to a subaccount of the Separate Account. Any dividend or capital gains distributions received by the Separate Account will be reinvested in shares of that same fund at their net asset value as of the dates paid. We normally calculate the unit values for each variable investment account once every business day as of the close of that day, usually 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. Sales and redemptions within any variable investment account will be transacted using the unit value calculated as follows after we receive your request either in writing or other form that we specify: If we receive your request before the close of our business day, we’ll use the unit value calculated as of the end of that business day. If we receive your request at or after the close of our business day, we’ll use the unit value calculated as of the end of the next business day. If a scheduled transaction falls on a day that is not a business day, we’ll process it as of the end of the next business day.
Voting Portfolio Shares
We will vote all portfolio shares that we hold in the Separate Account for policy owners in proportion to instructions timely received by us from policy owners from all our Separate Accounts that are registered with the SEC under the 1940 Act. We will vote all portfolio shares that we otherwise are entitled to vote (including our own shares and other shares for which we receive no instructions) on any matter in proportion to the instructions timely received by us and any affiliated insurance
39

companies with respect to the matter from policy owners in separate accounts of these insurance companies that are registered with the SEC under the 1940 Act. The effect of this proportional voting is that a small number of policy owners can determine the outcome of a vote. The voting privileges described above reflect our understanding of applicable Federal securities law requirements. To the extent that applicable law, regulations or interpretations change to eliminate or restrict the need for such voting privileges, we reserve the right to proceed in accordance with any such revised requirements.
We will determine the number of portfolio shares for which voting instructions may be given not more than 90 days prior to the meeting. Proxy material will be distributed to each person having the voting interest under the policy together with appropriate forms for giving voting instructions.
We determine the number of a portfolio’s shares held in a subaccount attributable to each owner by dividing the amount of a policy’s variable investment account value held in the subaccount by the net asset value of one share in the series fund. Fractional votes will be counted. We determine the number of shares as to which the owner may give instructions as of the record date for a series fund’s meeting. Owners of policies may give instructions regarding the election of the Board of Trustees or Board of Directors of a series fund, ratification of the selection of independent auditors, approval of series fund investment advisory agreements and other matters requiring a shareholder vote.
Legal Proceedings
There are no legal proceedings to which the Depositor, the Separate Account or the principal underwriter is a party or to which the assets of the Separate Account are subject that are likely to have a material adverse effect on the Separate Account or the ability of the principal underwriter to perform its contract with the Separate Account or of the Depositor to meet its obligations under the policy
Financial Statements
The financial statements of the Separate Account, as well as the consolidated financial statements of John Hancock USA are in the SAI. The financial statements of John Hancock USA have relevance for the policies only to the extent that they bear upon its ability to meet its obligations under the policies. You may request an SAI by contacting our Service Office at a phone number or address shown on the back cover of this prospectus.
40

Appendix: Portfolios Available Under The Policy
The following is a list of portfolios available under the policies. More information about the portfolios is available in the prospectuses for the portfolios, which may be amended from time to time. You can find the prospectuses and other information about the portfolios at dfinview.com/JohnHancock/TAHD/CVUL2004. You can also request this information at no cost by calling 1-800-732-5543 or by sending an email request to webmail@jhancock.com.
The current expenses and performance information below reflect fees and expenses of the portfolios, but do not reflect the other fees and expenses that your policy may charge. Expenses would be higher and performance would be lower if these other charges were included. Each portfolio’s past performance is not necessarily an indication of future performance.
Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To approximate the aggregate total return
of a broad-based U.S. domestic equity
market index.
500 Index Trust - Series NAV
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.25%*
25.95
15.40
11.75
To seek income and capital appreciation.
Active Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.71%
6.43
1.62
2.34
To seek to provide high total return
(including income and capital gains)
consistent with preservation of capital
over the long term.
American Asset Allocation Trust - Series
I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
0.93%
13.90
8.80
6.86
To seek to provide long-term growth of
capital.
American Global Growth Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
1.06%*
22.12
13.20
9.17
To seek to provide growth of capital.
American Growth Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
0.97%*
37.99
18.24
13.94
To seek to provide long-term growth of
capital and income.
American Growth-Income Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
0.91%*
25.68
12.95
10.52
To seek to provide long-term growth of
capital.
American International Trust - Series I
Capital Research and Management
Company (Adviser to the Master Fund,
American Fund Insurance Series)
1.17%*
15.39
4.44
3.02
To provide long-term growth of capital.
Current income is a secondary objective.
Blue Chip Growth Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
0.82%*
49.56
13.53
12.34
Appendix-1

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Capital Appreciation Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Jennison Associates LLC
0.81%*
52.85
17.98
14.11
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Capital Appreciation Value Trust - Series
I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
0.94%*
18.18
12.42
10.24
To seek total return consisting of income
and capital appreciation.
Core Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Allspring Global Investments, LLC
0.68%*
5.80
1.05
1.69
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Disciplined Value International Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Boston Partners Global Investors,
Inc.
0.84%*
19.96
8.42
3.05
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Emerging Markets Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Dimensional Fund Advisors LP
1.08%*
15.19
5.38
3.01
To provide substantial dividend income
and also long-term growth of capital.
Equity Income Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
0.76%*
9.39
11.08
7.82
To seek growth of capital.
Financial Industries Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.94%*
5.22
9.67
7.04
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Fundamental All Cap Core Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.76%*
35.40
18.31
12.26
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Fundamental Large Cap Value Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.78%*
23.45
17.57
10.18
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Global Equity Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.94%*
20.09
8.94
4.52
Appendix-2

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Health Sciences Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.05%*
4.25
10.52
10.89
To realize an above-average total return
over a market cycle of three to five years,
consistent with reasonable risk.
High Yield Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Western Asset Management
Company, LLC
0.86%*
13.05
4.90
3.54
To seek to track the performance of a
broad-based equity index of foreign
companies primarily in developed
countries and, to a lesser extent, in
emerging markets.
International Equity Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/SSGA Funds Management, Inc.
0.39%*
15.36
6.90
3.65
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
International Small Company Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Dimensional Fund Advisors LP
1.05%*
13.44
7.00
4.21
To provide a high level of current income
consistent with the maintenance of
principal and liquidity.
Investment Quality Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.76%*
6.49
1.37
1.94
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Current income is also a consideration.
Lifestyle Growth Portfolio - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.67%
17.00
9.09
6.72
To seek growth of capital and current
income while seeking to both manage the
volatility of return and limit the
magnitude of portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Balanced Portfolio -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.81%
11.99
4.62
3.81
To seek current income and growth of
capital, while seeking to both manage the
volatility of return and limit the
magnitude of portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Conservative Portfolio
- Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.80%
5.47
1.74
2.36
To seek long term growth of capital while
seeking to both manage the volatility of
return and limit the magnitude of
portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Growth Portfolio -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.84%
13.69
5.18
3.70
Appendix-3

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
To seek current income and growth of
capital while seeking to both manage the
volatility of return and limit the
magnitude of portfolio losses.
Managed Volatility Moderate Portfolio -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.80%
10.64
4.15
3.72
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Mid Cap Growth Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.95%
18.71
12.32
9.73
Seeks to approximate the aggregate total
return of a mid cap U.S. domestic equity
market index.
Mid Cap Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.46%*
16.01
12.14
8.81
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Mid Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.01%*
18.52
13.06
9.29
To obtain maximum current income
consistent with preservation of principal
and liquidity.
Money Market Trust** - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.33%*
4.76
1.64
1.04
To seek maximum total return, consistent
with preservation of capital and prudent
investment management.
Opportunistic Fixed Income Trust - Series
I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.93%*
8.23
2.67
2.16
To seek to achieve a combination of long-
term capital appreciation and current
income.
Real Estate Securities Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
0.81%*
13.02
7.69
7.94
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Current income is incidental to the fund’s
objective.
Science & Technology Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.04%*
54.68
18.61
15.70
To seek income and capital appreciation.
Select Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.65%*
6.10
1.34
1.86
To seek a high level of current income
consistent with preservation of capital.
Maintaining a stable share price is a
secondary goal.
Short Term Government Income Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.72%*
3.92
0.48
0.62
Appendix-4

Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
Seeks to approximate the aggregate total
return of a small cap U.S. domestic equity
market index.
Small Cap Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.53%*
16.49
9.56
6.80
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Small Cap Opportunities Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Dimensional Fund Advisors LP and
GW&K Investment Management, LLC
0.89%*
18.05
13.93
7.86
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Small Cap Stock Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
1.13%*
16.10
11.10
7.37
To seek long-term capital appreciation.
Small Cap Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Wellington Management Company
LLP
1.04%*
14.01
8.80
6.02
To seek long-term growth of capital.
Small Company Value Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.
1.21%*
13.49
9.19
6.54
To seek a high level of current income.
Strategic Income Opportunities Trust -
Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.79%*
7.37
3.25
2.79
Seeks to approximate the aggregate total
return of a broad U.S. domestic equity
market index.
Total Stock Market Index Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(North America) Limited
0.58%*
25.53
14.38
10.73
The fund seeks a high level of current
income consistent with the maintenance
of liquidity and the preservation of
capital.
Ultra Short Term Bond Trust - Series I
John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers
LLC/Manulife Investment Management
(US) LLC
0.67%*
4.60
1.55
1.03
Investment Objective
Portfolio and Adviser/Subadviser
Current
Expenses
Average Annual
Total Returns
(as of 12/31/23) (%)
1-Year
5-Year
10-Year
The Portfolio seeks maximum real return
consistent with preservation of real
capital and prudent investment
management.
PIMCO VIT All Asset Portfolio - Series
M
Pacific Investment Management
Company LLC/Research Affiliates, LLC
2.49%*
7.83
5.69
3.73
* This portfolio’s annual expenses reflect temporary fee or expense waivers or reimbursements.
Appendix-5

** This Portfolio is no longer accepting premium payments .
Appendix-6

JOHN HANCOCK USA SERVICE OFFICE
Overnight Express Delivery
Mail Delivery
Life Post Issue – Specialty Products
John Hancock Insurance Company
372 University Ave, Suite #55979
Westwood, MA 02090
Life Post Issue - Specialty Products
John Hancock Insurance Company
PO Box 55979
Boston, MA 02205
Phone:
 
1-800-732-5543
 
In addition to this prospectus, John Hancock USA has filed with the SEC an SAI that contains additional information about John Hancock USA and the Separate Account, including information on our history, services provided to the Separate Account, and the audited financial statements for John Hancock USA and the Separate Account. The SAI is incorporated by reference into this prospectus and personalized illustrations of death benefits, policy values and surrender values are available, without charge, upon request. You may obtain the personalized illustrations from your John Hancock USA representative. You can view the SAI and other information about your Policy at dfinview.com/JohnHancock/TAHD/CVUL2004. The SAI may also be obtained, without charge, by contacting the John Hancock USA Service Office. You should also contact the John Hancock USA Service Office to request any other information about your policy or to make any inquiries about its operation.
Reports and other information about the Separate Account are available on the SEC’s Internet website at http://www.sec.gov. Copies of such information may be obtained, upon payment of a duplicating fee, by submitting an electronic request to the following email address: publicinfo@sec.gov.
1940 Act File No. 811-51301933 Act File No. 333-100567
EDGAR Contract Identifier No. C000027519


Statement of Additional Information
dated April 29, 2024
for interests in
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N
(Name of Registrant)
JOHN HANCOCK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY (U.S.A.)
(“John Hancock USA”)
(Name of Depositor)
This is a Statement of Additional Information (“SAI”) relating to the following variable life insurance and variable universal life insurance policies issued by John Hancock USA and providing for allocation of premiums and policy values to the John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N:
Name of Policy (and SEC EDGAR Identifier #)
Name of Policy (and SEC EDGAR Identifier #)
Corporate VUL (C000069370)
Corporate VUL 04 (C000027519)
Corporate VUL 03 (C000027518)
Corporate VUL 05 (C000027520)
This Statement of Additional Information is not the prospectus. The prospectus, dated the same date as this SAI, may be obtained from a John Hancock USA representative or by contacting our Service Office by mail at Life Post Issue- Specialty Products, John Hancock Insurance Company, PO Box 55979, Boston, MA 02205, or telephone at 1-800-521-1234.
Table Of Contents
 
Page No.
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3

General Information and History
Depositor
Under the Federal securities laws, the entity responsible for organization of the registered separate account underlying the variable life insurance policy is known as the “Depositor.” John Hancock USA (“Depositor”) is a stock life insurance company organized under the laws of Maine on August 20, 1955 by a special act of the Maine legislature and redomesticated under the laws of Michigan. The Depositor is a licensed life insurance company in the District of Columbia and all states of the United States except New York. Until 2004, the Depositor was known as The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.). The Depositor's ultimate parent is Manulife Financial Corporation (“MFC”), a publicly traded company based in Toronto, Canada. MFC is the holding company of The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company and its subsidiaries, collectively known as Manulife Financial.
Registrant
Under the Federal securities laws, the registered separate account underlying the variable life insurance policy is known as the “Registrant.” John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N (the “Registrant” or “Separate Account”), is a separate account . The Separate Account meets the definition of “separate account” under the Federal securities laws and is registered as a unit investment trust under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”). Such registration does not involve supervision by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) of the management of the Separate Account or of the Depositor.
Separate Account N’s subaccounts are made available as the variable investment accounts under variable life insurance and variable universal life insurance policies issued by John Hancock USA. New subaccounts may be added and made available to policy owners from time to time. Existing subaccounts may be modified or deleted at any time.
Services
Administration of policies issued by the Depositor and of registered separate accounts organized by the Depositor may be provided by other affiliates. Neither the Depositor nor the separate accounts are assessed any charges for such services.
Custodianship and depository services for the Registrant are provided by State Street Investment Services (“State Street”). State Street’s address is State Street Financial Center, One Lincoln Street, Boston, Massachusetts, 02111.
Audit services are provided by Ernst & Young LLP, independent registered public accounting firm. Ernst & Young LLP’s address is 200 Clarendon Street, Boston, Massachusetts, 02116.
Underwriters
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Distributors LLC (“JH Distributors”), a Delaware limited liability company wholly owned by John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.), is the principal distributor and underwriter of the securities offered through the prospectus. JH Distributors acts as the principal distributor of a number of other life insurance and annuity products we and our affiliates offer or maintain. JH Distributors also acts as the principal underwriter of John Hancock Variable Insurance Trust (the “Trust”), whose securities are used to fund certain variable investment options under the policies and under other life insurance and annuity products we offer or maintain.
JH Distributors' principal address is 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, MA 02116. JH Distributors is a broker-dealer registered under the Securities Act of 1934 (the “1934 Act”) and is a member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”).
Offering and Commissions
We offer the policies for sale, on a continuous basis, through individuals who are licensed as insurance agents and who are registered representatives of broker-dealers that have entered into selling agreements with JH Distributors.
The aggregate dollar amount of underwriting commissions paid to JH Distributors by the Depositor and its affiliates in connection with the sale of variable life products in 2023, 2022, and 2021, was $100,002,438, $110,625,049, and $99,954,847, respectively. JH Distributors did not retain any of these amounts during such periods.
2

The registered representative through whom your policy is sold will be compensated pursuant to the registered representative’s own arrangement with his or her broker-dealer. Compensation to broker-dealers for the promotion and sale of the policies is not paid directly by policy owners but will be recouped through the fees and charges imposed under the policy.
Other Payments
Additional compensation and revenue sharing arrangements may be offered to certain broker-dealer firms and other financial intermediaries. The terms of such arrangements may differ among firms we select based on various factors. In general, the arrangements involve three types of payments or any combination thereof:
• Fixed dollar payments: The amount of these payments varies widely. JH Distributors may, for example, make one or more payments in connection with a firm’s conferences, seminars or training programs, seminars for the public, advertising and sales campaigns regarding the policies, to assist a firm in connection with its systems, operations and marketing expenses, or for other activities of a selling firm or wholesaler. JH Distributors may make these payments upon the initiation of a relationship with a firm, and at any time thereafter.
• Payments based upon sales: These payments are based upon a percentage of the total amount of money received, or anticipated to be received, for sales through a firm of some or all of the insurance products that we and/or our affiliates offer. JH Distributors makes these payments on a periodic basis.
• Payments based upon “assets under management”: These payments are based upon a percentage of the policy value of some or all of our (and/or our affiliates’) insurance products that were sold through the firm. JH Distributors makes these payments on a periodic basis.
Additional Information
Sales Load
We expect to recover our total sales expenses over the life of the policies through policy charges, including the premium, surrender and face amount charges. The amount of the charges in any policy year does not specifically correspond to sales expenses for that year, and to the extent that the premium, surrender and face amount charges do not cover total sales expenses, the sales expenses may be recovered from other sources, including the asset-based risk charge and other charges with respect to the policies, or from our general assets.
Underwriting Procedures
A policy will not be issued until the underwriting process has been completed to our satisfaction. The underwriting process generally includes the obtaining of information concerning the insured person's age, medical history, occupation and other personal information. This information is then used to determine the cost of insurance charge.
Financial statements
The statutory-basis financial statements of John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) as of December 31, 2023 and 2022, and for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2023 incorporated in this SAI by reference to the report on Form N-VPFS filed April 8, 2024 have been so incorporated in reliance on the report of Ernst & Young LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting. The financial statements of John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N (File No. 811-05130) as of December 31, 2023 and for each of the periods indicated in the Financial Statements incorporated in this SAI by reference to the report on Form N-VPFS filed April 8, 2024 have been so incorporated in reliance on the report of Ernst & Young LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
The business address of Ernst & Young LLP is 200 Clarendon Street, Boston, Massachusetts, 02116.
3


PART C
OTHER INFORMATION
Item 30. Exhibits
The following exhibits are filed as part of this Registration Statement:
(b) Not applicable.
(g) The Depositor maintains reinsurance arrangements in the normal course of business, none of which are material.

(h) (1) Participation Agreement among the Manufacturers Insurance Company (U.S.A.), the Manufacturers Insurance Company of New York, PIMCO Variable Insurance Trust and PIMCO Advisors Distributors LLC dated April 30, 2004, incorporated by reference to pre-effective amendment number 1, file number 333-126668, filed with the Commission on October 12, 2005.
(j) Not applicable.
(l) Not Applicable.
(m) Not Applicable.
(o) Not Applicable.
(p) Not Applicable.
(r) Not Applicable.
Powers of Attorney

Item 31. Directors and Officers of the Depositor
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS OF JOHN HANCOCK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY (U.S.A.):
Name and Principal Business Address
Position with Depositor
Brooks Tingle
200 Berkeley Street
Boston, MA 02116
Chair, Director, President & Chief Executive Officer
Nora Newton Crouch
804 Pepper Avenue
Richmond, VA 23226
Director
Thomas Edward Hampton
5207 2nd Street NW
Washington, DC 20011
Director
J. Stephanie Nam
129 State Street
Portsmouth, NH 03801
Director
Ken Ross
200 Berkeley St.
Boston, MA 02116
Director, Vice President
Shamus Weiland
200 Bloor Street
E. Toronto, ON M4W 1E5
Director
Henry H. Wong
200 Berkeley Street
Boston, MA 02116
Director, Vice President
Executive Vice Presidents
 
Andrew G. Arnott**
Global Head of Retail, GWAM
Christopher Paul Conkey**
Global Head of Public Markets
Scott S. Hartz**
Chief Investment Officer – U.S. Investments
Senior Vice Presidents
 
John Addeo**
Global Fixed Income Chief Investment Officer
John C.S. Anderson**
Global Head of Corporate Finance
Kevin J. Cloherty**
Deputy General Counsel, Global Markets
Mike Dallas**
Global Head of Employee Experience
Aimee DeCamillo*
Global Head of Retirement
Peter DeFrancesco*
Head of Digital – Direct to Consumer
Michael F Dommermuth***
Head of Wealth & Asset Management
Kristie Feinberg*
Head of MIM US and Europe
Maryscott Greenwood**
Global Head of Regulatory & Public Affairs
Len van Greuning*
Chief Information Officer MIM
Anne Hammer*
Global Chief Communications Officer
John B Maynard**
Deputy General Counsel, Legacy, Reinsurance & Tax
Steven E. Medina**
Global Equity Chief Investment Officer
Joelle Metzman**
GWAM Chief Risk Officer
Sinead O’Connor*
Head of Actuarial Policy
Wayne Park*
Head of US Retirement
Gerald Peterson**
Global Head of Operations, GWAM
Nicole Rafferty***
Global Head of Contact Centers
Susan Roberts*
Head of LTC Customer Care Transformation
Ian Roke**
Global Head of Asset & Liability Management
Thomas Samoluk**
US General Counsel and US Government Relations
Anthony Teta*
US Head of Inforce Management
Nathan Thooft**
Global MAST Chief Investment Officer
Anne Valentine-Andrews***
Global Head of Private Markets

Name and Principal Business Address
Position with Depositor
Blake Witherington**
US Chief Credit Officer
Vice Presidents
 
Lynda Abend*
 
Mark Akerson*
 
Kenneth D’Amato**
 
Jay Aronowitz**
 
Kevin Askew**
 
William Auger*
 
Jack Barry*
 
P.J. Beltramini*
 
Zahir Bhanji***
 
Jon Bourgault**
 
Paul Boyne**
 
Ian B. Brodie**
 
Ted Bruntrager*
CCO & Chief Risk Officer
Grant Buchanan***
 
Ginger Burns**
 
Brendan Campbell*
 
Yan Rong Cao*
 
Rick A. Carlson**
 
Patricia Rosch Carrington**
 
Alex Catterick****
 
Ken K. Cha*
 
Diana Chan***
Head of Treasury Operations
Christopher M. Chapman**
 
Sheila Chernicki*
 
Teresa H. Chuang**
 
Eileen Cloherty*
 
Maggie Coleman***
 
Catherine Z. Collins**
 
Meredith Comtois*
 
Thomas D. Crohan**
 
Susan Curry**
 
Kenneth Dai***
Treasury
Michelle M. Dauphinais*
 
Frederick D Deminico**
 
Susan P Dikramanjian**
 
William D Droege**
 
Jeffrey Duckworth**
 
Marc Feliciano**
 
Katie M. Firth**
 
Carolyn Flanagan**
 
Lauren Marx Fleming**
 
Philip J. Fontana**
 
Laura Foster***
 
Matthew Gabriel*
 
Paul Gallagher**
 
Melissa Gamble**
 
Scott B. Garfield**
 
Marco Giacomelli***
 
Jeffrey N. Given**
 
Thomas C. Goggins**
 
Dara Gough*
 
Howard C. Greene**
 
Erik Gustafson**
 
Neal Halder*
 
Jeffrey Hammer***
 
Lindsay L. Hanson*
 

Name and Principal Business Address
Position with Depositor
Richard Harris***
Appointed Actuary
Jessica Harrison***
 
John Hatch*
Chief Operations Officer – US Segment
Justin Helferich***
 
Michael Hession*
 
Philip Huvos*
 
Sesh Iyengar**
 
Tasneem Kanji**
 
Geoffrey Grant Kelley**
 
Recep C. Kendircioglu**
 
Neal P. Kerins*
 
Michael P King***
 
Heidi Knapp**
 
Hung Ko***
 
Robert Krempus***
 
Diane R. Landers**
 
Michael Landolfi**
 
Tracy Lannigan**
Corporate Secretary
Jessica Lee***
 
Scott Lively**
 
David Loh***
 
Jeffrey H. Long**
 
Jennifer Lundmark*
 
Edward P. Macdonald**
 
Patrick MacDonnell**
 
Shawn McCarthy**
 
Andrew J. McFetridge**
 
Jonathan McGee**
 
Katie L. McKay**
 
Eric S. Menzer**
 
Stella Mink***
 
Michelle Morey*
 
Scott Morin*
 
Catherine Murphy*
Deputy Appointed Actuary
Richard Myrus**
 
Lisa Natalicchio*
 
Jeffrey H. Nataupsky**
 
Scott Navin**
 
Jeffrey Packard**
 
Pragya Pandit*
 
Onay Payne***
 
Gary M. Pelletier**
 
David Pemstein**
 
Jessica Portelance***
 
Jason M. Pratt**
 
Ed Rapp**
 
Todd Renneker**
 
Chet Ritchie*
 
Charles A. Rizzo**
 
Emily Roland**
 
Josephine M. Rollka*
 
Barbara H. Rosen-Campbell**
 
Caryn Rothman**
 
Devon Russell*
 
Paul Sanabria**
 
Emory W. Sanders*
 
Jeffrey R. Santerre**
 
Marcia Schow**
 

Name and Principal Business Address
Position with Depositor
Christopher L. Sechler**
 
Garima Vijay Sharma***
 
Estelle Shaw-Latimer***
 
Thomas Shea**
 
Lisa Shepard**
 
Alex Silva*
CFO - US Insurance
Susan Simi**
 
Darren Smith**
 
Jayanthi Srinivasan***
 
Brittany Straughn*
 
Katherine Sullivan**
 
Trevor Swanberg**
 
Robert E. Sykes, Jr.**
 
Wilfred Talbot*
 
Gary Tankersley*
Head of US Retirement Distribution
Michelle Taylor-Jones*
 
Brian E. Torrisi**
 
Simonetta Vendittelli*
Chief Financial Officer and Controller
Gina Goldych Walters**
 
Adam Weigold**
 
Jonathan T. White**
 
Bryan Wilhelm*
 
Karin Wilsey**
 
Adam Wise**
 
Jeffrey Wolfe**
 
Thomas Zakian**
 
Michael Zargaj*
 
*Principal Business Office is 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, MA 02116
**Principal Business Office is 197 Clarendon Street, Boston, MA 02116
***Principal Business Office is 200 Bloor Street, Toronto, Canada M4W1E5
****Principal Business Office is 250 Bloor Street, Toronto, Canada M4W1E5
Item 32. Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with the Depositor or the Registrant
The Registrant is a separate account of the Depositor operating as a unit investment trust. The Registrant supports benefits payable under the Depositor's variable life insurance policies by investing assets allocated to various investment options in shares of John Hancock Variable Insurance Trust (formerly, John Hancock Trust) and other mutual funds registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as open-end management investment companies of the “series” type.
As of the effective date of the registration statement, the Company and its affiliates are controlled by Manulife Financial Corporation.


Item 33. Indemnification
The Form of Selling Agreement or Service Agreement between John Hancock Distributors LLC (“JH Distributors”) and various broker-dealers may provide that the selling broker-dealer indemnify and hold harmless JH Distributors and the Company, including their affiliates, officers, directors, employees and agents against losses, claims, liabilities or expenses (including reasonable attorney’s fees), arising out of or based upon a breach of the Selling or Service Agreement, or any applicable law or regulation or any applicable rule of any self-regulatory organization or similar provision consistent with industry practice.
Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the Securities Act of 1933 may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, the registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
Item 34. Principal Underwriters
(a) Set forth below is information concerning other investment companies for which JH Distributors, the principal underwriter of the contracts, acts as investment adviser or principal underwriter.
Name of Investment Company
Capacity in Which Acting
John Hancock Variable Life Account S
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Variable Life Account U
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Variable Life Account V
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Variable Life Account UV
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account R
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account T
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account W
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account X
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account Q
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account A
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account H
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account I
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account J
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account K
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account L
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account M
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company of New York Separate Account B
Principal Underwriter
John Hancock Life Insurance Company of New York Separate Account A
Principal Underwriter

(b) John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) is the sole member of JH Distributors and the following comprise the Board of Managers and Officers of JH Distributors.
Name
Title
Rick Carlson**
Vice President, US Taxation
Jeffrey H. Long**
Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Financial
Operations Principal
Edward P. Macdonald**
Vice President, General Counsel
Gary Tankersley*
Director, Chair, President and Chief Executive Officer
Alex Silva*
Director
Christopher Walker***
Director, Vice President, Investments
Tracy Lannigan**
Vice President, Corporate Secretary
*Principal Business Office is 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, MA 02116
**Principal Business Office is 197 Clarendon Street, Boston, MA 02116
***Principal Business Office is 200 Bloor Street, Toronto, Canada M4W1E5
(c) John Hancock Distributors LLC
Compensation received, directly or indirectly, from the Registrant by John Hancock Distributors LLC, the sole principal underwriter of the contracts funded by the Separate Account during the last fiscal year:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
Name of
Principal
Underwriter
Net
Underwriting
Discounts and
Commissions
Compensation
on Events
Occasioning
the Deduction
of a Deferred
Sales Load
Brokerage
Commissions
Other
Compensation
John Hancock
Distributors LLC
$0
$0
$0
$0
Item 35. Location of Accounts and Records
The information required by this item is included in the most recent Form N-CEN filed with the SEC by the Separate Account.
Item 36. Management Services
All management services contracts are discussed in Part A or Part B.
Item 37. Fee Representation
Representation of Insurer Pursuant to Section 26 of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) hereby represents that the fees and charges deducted under the policies issued pursuant to this registration statement, in the aggregate, are reasonable in relation to the services rendered, the expenses expected to be incurred, and the risks assumed by the Company.

Signatures
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of the requirements for effectiveness of this registration statement under rule 485(b) under the Securities Act and has duly caused this registration statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, duly authorized, in the City of Boston, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, on this 19th day of April, 2024.
John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.) Separate Account N
(Registrant)
By: JOHN HANCOCK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY (U.S.A.)
By: *____________________
Brooks Tingle
Principal Executive Officer
JOHN HANCOCK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY (U.S.A.)
(Depositor)
By: *____________________
Brooks Tingle
Principal Executive Officer
 
 
/s/Michael A. Ramirez

Michael A. Ramirez, as Attorney-In-Fact
 
 
 
*Pursuant to Power of Attorney

Signatures
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this registration statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities indicated as of the 19th day of April, 2024.
Signatures
Title
*

Simonetta Vendittelli
Vice President, Controller, and Chief Financial
Officer
*

Brooks Tingle
Chair, Director, President and Chief Executive
Officer
*

Nora N. Crouch
Director
*

Thomas Edward Hampton
Director
*

J. Stephanie Nam
Director
*

Ken Ross
Director
*

Shamus Weiland
Director
*

Henry H. Wong
Director
/s/Michael A. Ramirez

Michael A. Ramirez, as Attorney-In-Fact
 
 
 
*Pursuant to Power of Attorney


ATTACHMENTS / EXHIBITS

ATTACHMENTS / EXHIBITS

JHUSA- LIST OF THIRD-PARTY BROKER-DEALER FIRMS

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

OPINION OF COUNSEL