NASDAQ: SNFCA

SECURITY NATIONAL FINANCIAL CORP

CIK 0000318673 · Finance Services

Small Revenue $345M Assets $1.6B as of Jul 2, 2026

Security National Financial Corporation (the “Company”) operates in three reportable business segments: life insurance, cemetery and mortuary, and mortgages. The life insurance segment is engaged in the business of selling and servicing selected lines of life insurance, annuity products, and… About this business →

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8-K Filed Jun 29, 2026 · Period ending Jun 26, 2026

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10-Q Filed May 11, 2026 · Period ending Mar 31, 2026

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10-K Filed Mar 16, 2026 · Period ending Dec 31, 2025

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10-Q Filed Nov 13, 2025 · Period ending Sep 30, 2025

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10-Q Filed Aug 14, 2025 · Period ending Jun 30, 2025

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8-K Filed Jul 1, 2025 · Period ending Jun 27, 2025

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8-K Filed Jun 30, 2025 · Period ending Jun 27, 2025

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10-K Filed Mar 31, 2025 · Period ending Dec 31, 2024

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About SECURITY NATIONAL FINANCIAL CORP

Source: Item 1 (Business) from the 10-K filed March 16, 2026. Description as filed by the company with the SEC.

Item
1. Business

Security
National Financial Corporation (the “Company”) operates in three reportable business segments: life insurance, cemetery and
mortuary, and mortgages. The life insurance segment is engaged in the business of selling and servicing selected lines of life insurance,
annuity products, and accident and health insurance. These products are marketed in 42 states through a commissioned sales force of independent
licensed insurance agents who may also sell insurance products of other companies. The cemetery and mortuary segment consists of eleven
mortuaries and five cemeteries in the state of Utah, one cemetery in the state of California, and one cemetery and four mortuaries in
the state of New Mexico. The Company also engages in pre-need selling of funeral, cemetery, mortuary, and cremation services through
its cemetery and mortuary locations. The mortgage segment originates and underwrites or otherwise purchases residential and commercial
loans for new construction, existing homes, and other real estate projects. The mortgage segment operates through 85 retail offices in
25 states and is an approved mortgage lender in several other states.

The
Company’s design and structure are that each business segment is related to the other business segments and contributes to the
profitability of the other segments. The Company’s cemetery and mortuary segment provides a level of public awareness that assists
in the sales and marketing of insurance and pre-need cemetery and funeral products. The Company’s insurance segment invests its
assets (including, in part, pre-need funeral products and services) in investments authorized by the respective insurance departments
of their states of domicile. The Company also pursues growth through acquisitions. The Company’s mortgage segment provides mortgage
loans and other real estate investment opportunities.

Read full description ↓

The
Company was organized as a holding company in 1979 when Security National Life Insurance Company (“Security National Life”)
became a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, and the former stockholders of Security National Life became stockholders of the Company.
Security National Life was formed in 1965 and has acquired or purchased significant blocks of business which include Capital Investors
Life Insurance Company (1994), Civil Service Employees Life Insurance Company (1995), Southern Security Life Insurance Company (1998),
Menlo Life Insurance Company (1999), Acadian Life Insurance Company (2002), Paramount Security Life Insurance Company (2004), Memorial
Insurance Company of America (2005 and subsequently sold in 2021 to FOXO Life Insurance Company), Capital Reserve Life Insurance Company
(2007), Southern Security Life Insurance Company, Inc. (2008), North America Life Insurance Company (2011, 2015), Trans-Western Life
Insurance Company (2012), Mothe Life Insurance Company (2012), DLE Life Insurance Company (2012), American Republic Insurance Company
(2015), First Guaranty Insurance Company (2016), Kilpatrick Life Insurance Company (2019), and merger with FOXO Life Insurance Company
(2023).

The
cemetery and mortuary operations have also grown through the acquisition of other cemetery and mortuary companies. The cemetery and mortuary
companies that the Company has acquired are Holladay Memorial Park, Inc. (1991), Cottonwood Mortuary, Inc. (1991), Deseret Memorial,
Inc. (1991), Probst Family Funerals and Cremations L.L.C. (2019), Heber Valley Funeral Home, Inc. (2019), Rivera Funerals, Cremations
and Memorial Gardens (2021), and Holbrook Mortuary (2021).

In
1993, the Company formed SecurityNational Mortgage Company (“SecurityNational Mortgage”) to originate and refinance residential
mortgage loans.

See
Note 20 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for additional information regarding the business segments of the Company.

3

Life
Insurance

Products

The
Company, through Security National Life, First Guaranty Insurance Company (“First Guaranty”), and Kilpatrick Life Insurance
Company (“Kilpatrick”), issues and administers selected lines of life insurance and annuities. The Company’s life insurance
business includes funeral plans and interest-sensitive life insurance, as well as other traditional life, limited-payment life, accident,
and limited health insurance products. The Company places specific marketing emphasis on funeral plans through pre-need planning. The
Company’s insurance subsidiaries, Kilpatrick, Southern Security Life Insurance Company, Inc. (“Southern Security”)
and Trans-Western Life Insurance Company (“Trans-Western”), do not actively write policies, but service and maintain policies
that were issued prior to their acquisition by Security National Life.

A
funeral plan is a small face value life insurance policy that generally has face coverage of up to $30,000. The Company believes that
funeral plans represent a marketing niche that has less competition because most insurance companies do not offer similar coverage. The
purpose of the funeral plan policy is to pay the costs and expenses incurred at the time of a person’s death. On a per thousand-dollar
cost of insurance basis, these policies can be more expensive to the policyholder than many types of non-burial insurance due to their
low face amount, requiring the fixed cost of the policy administration to be distributed over a smaller policy size, and the simplified
underwriting practices that result in higher mortality costs.

Markets
and Distribution

The
Company is licensed to sell insurance in 42 states. In marketing its life insurance products, the Company seeks to locate, develop and
service specific niche markets. The Company’s funeral plan policies are sold primarily to people who range in age from 45 to 85
and have low to moderate income. Most of the Company’s funeral plan premiums come from the states of Arkansas, California, Florida,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah.

The
Company sells its life insurance products through direct agents, brokers, and independent licensed agents who may also sell insurance
products of other companies. The commissions on life insurance products range from approximately 50% to 150% of first year premiums.
In those cases where the Company utilizes its direct agents in selling such policies, those agents customarily receive advances against
future commissions.

In
some instances, funeral plan insurance is marketed in conjunction with the Company’s cemetery and mortuary sales force. When it
is marketed by that group, the beneficiary is usually the Company’s cemeteries and mortuaries. Thus, death benefits that become
payable under the policy are paid to the Company’s cemetery and mortuary subsidiaries to the extent of services performed and products
purchased.

In
marketing funeral plan insurance, the Company also seeks and obtains third-party endorsements from other cemeteries and mortuaries within
its marketing areas. Typically, these cemeteries and mortuaries will provide letters of endorsement and may share in mailing and other
lead-generating costs since these businesses are usually made the beneficiary of the policy. The following table summarizes the life
insurance business for the five years ended December 31, 2025:

2025
2024
2023
2022
2021

Life Insurance

Policy/Certificate Count as of December 31
629,476
635,791
640,970
646,296
653,450

Insurance in force as of December 31 (in thousands)
$3,933,254
$3,947,671
$3,552,554
$3,446,836
(1)
$3,415,368
(1)

Premiums Collected (in thousands)
$118,519
$118,151
$113,584
$103,304
$99,006

(1)
Prior years have been adjusted to include accidental death benefit insurance in force that was inadvertently excluded.

4

Underwriting

The
factors considered in evaluating an application for ordinary life insurance coverage can include the applicant’s age, occupation,
general health condition, and medical history. Upon receipt of a satisfactory (non-funeral plan insurance) application, which contains
pertinent medical questions, the Company issues insurance based upon its medical limits and requirements subject to the following general
non-medical limits:

Age
Nearest

Non-Medical

Birthday

Limits

0-50

$100,000

51-up

Medical
information

required
(APS or exam)

When
underwriting life insurance, the Company will sometimes issue policies with higher premium rates for substandard risks.

The
Company’s funeral plan insurance is written on a simplified medical application with underwriting requirements being a completed
application, a phone interview of the applicant, and an intelliscript prescription history inquiry. There are several underwriting classes
in which an applicant can be placed.

Annuities

Products

The
Company’s annuity business includes single premium deferred annuities, flexible premium deferred annuities, and immediate annuities.
A single premium deferred annuity is a contract where the individual remits a sum of money to the Company, which is retained on deposit
until such time as the individual may wish to annuitize or surrender the contract for cash. A flexible premium deferred annuity gives
the contract holder the right to make premium payments of varying amounts or to make no further premium payments after his initial payment.
These single and flexible premium deferred annuities can have initial surrender charges. The surrender charges act as a deterrent to
individuals who may wish to prematurely surrender their annuity contracts. An immediate annuity is a contract in which the individual
remits a sum of money to the Company in return for the Company’s obligation to pay a series of payments on a periodic basis over
a designated period, such as an individual’s life, or for such other period as may be designated.

Annuities
have guaranteed interest rates that range from 1% to 6.5% per annum. Rates above the guaranteed interest rate credited are periodically
modified by the Company’s Board of Directors at its discretion. For the Company to make a profit on an annuity product, the Company
must maintain an interest rate spread between its investment income and the interest rates credited to the annuities. Commissions, issuance
expenses, and general and administrative expenses are deducted from this interest rate spread.

Markets
and Distribution

The
general market for the Company’s annuities is middle to older age individuals. A major source of annuity sales comes from direct
agents and are sold in conjunction with other insurance sales. If an individual does not qualify for a funeral plan, the agent will often
sell that individual an annuity to fund final expenses.

The
following table summarizes the annuity business for the five years ended December 31, 2025:

2025
2024
2023
2022
2021

Annuities Policy/Certificate Count as of December
31
23,864
24,296
24,924
24,225
24,901

Deposits Collected (in thousands)
$10,564
$11,740
$10,946
$9,972
$9,719

5

Accident
and Health

Products

Through
its various acquisitions, the Company occasionally acquires small blocks of accident and health insurance policies, which it continues
to service. The Company offered a low-cost comprehensive diver’s accident insurance policy that provided worldwide coverage for
medical expense reimbursement in the event of a diving accident. This product was discontinued in March 2024.

Markets
and Distribution

The
Company marketed its diver’s accident insurance policies through the internet.

The
following table summarizes the accident and health insurance business for the five years ended December 31, 2025:

2025
2024
2023
2022
2021

Accident and Health Policy/Certificate
Count as of December 31
6,886
7,592
9,379
11,132
12,494

Premiums Collected (in thousands)
$171
$188
$216
$543
$353

Reinsurance

The
primary purpose of reinsurance is to enable an insurance company to issue an insurance policy in an amount larger than the risk the insurance
company is willing to assume for itself. The insurance company remains obligated for the amounts reinsured (ceded) in the event the reinsurers
do not meet their obligations.

The
Company currently cedes and assumes certain risks with various authorized unaffiliated reinsurers pursuant to reinsurance treaties, which
are generally renewed annually. The premiums paid by the Company are based on several factors, primarily including the age of the insured
and the risk ceded to the reinsurer.

It
is the Company’s policy to retain no more than $100,000 of ordinary insurance per life insured, with the excess risk being reinsured.
The total policy amount of life insurance reinsured by other companies as of December 31, 2025 and 2024, was $316,251,000 and $325,189,000,
which represented approximately 8.0% and 8.2% of the Company’s total life insurance policy amount in force on that date, respectively.

See
“Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and Financial Condition” and “Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements” for additional disclosure and discussion regarding reinsurance.

Investments

The
investments that support the Company’s life insurance and annuity obligations are determined by the investment committees of the
Company’s subsidiaries and ratified by the full boards of directors of the respective subsidiaries. A significant portion of the
Company’s investments must meet statutory requirements governing the nature and quality of permitted investments by its insurance
subsidiaries. The Company maintains a diversified investment portfolio consisting of common stocks, preferred stocks, municipal bonds,
corporate bonds, mortgage loans, real estate, and other securities and investments.

See
“Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and Financial Condition” and “Notes to Consolidated
Financial Statements” for additional disclosure and discussion regarding investments.

6

Cemetery
and Mortuary

Products

Through
its cemetery and mortuary segment, the Company markets a variety of products and services both on a pre-need basis (prior to death) and
an at-need basis (at the time of death). The products include plots, interment vaults, mausoleum crypts, markers, caskets, urns, and
other death care related products. These services include professional services of funeral directors, opening and closing of graves,
use of chapels and viewing rooms, and use of automobiles and clothing. The Company has a mortuary at each of its cemeteries, other than
Holladay Memorial Park and Singing Hills Memorial Park, and has ten separate stand-alone mortuary facilities.

Markets
and Distribution

The
Company’s pre-need cemetery and mortuary sales are marketed to persons of all ages but are generally purchased by persons 45 years
of age and older. The Company is limited in its geographic distribution of these products to areas lying within an approximate 20-mile
radius of its mortuaries and cemeteries. The Company’s at-need sales are similarly limited in the geographic area.

The
Company actively seeks to sell its cemetery and funeral products to customers on a pre-need basis. The Company employs cemetery sales
representatives on a commission basis to sell these products. Many of these pre-need cemetery and mortuary sales representatives are
also licensed insurance salesmen and sell funeral plan insurance. In some instances, the Company’s cemetery and mortuary facilities
are the named beneficiaries of the funeral plan policies.

Potential
customers are located via telephone sales prospecting, responses to letters mailed by the pre-planning consultants, billboards and other
outside advertising, referrals, and door-to-door canvassing. The Company trains its sales representatives and helps generate leads for
them.

Mortgage
Loans

Products

The
Company, through SecurityNational Mortgage, is active in the residential real estate market. SecurityNational Mortgage is approved by
the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), and other secondary
market investors, to originate a variety of residential mortgage loan products, which are subsequently sold to investors. The Company
uses internal and external funding sources to fund mortgage loans.

Security
National Life originates and funds commercial real estate loans, residential construction loans, and land development loans for internal
investment.

Markets
and Distribution

The
Company’s residential mortgage lending services are marketed primarily to real estate brokers, builders and directly to consumers.
The Company has a strong retail origination presence in the Utah, Florida, Texas, Nevada and Arizona markets and many other states across
the country. See “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and Financial Condition” and “Notes
to Consolidated Financial Statements” for additional disclosure and discussion regarding mortgage loans.

Recent
Acquisitions and Other Business Activities

Real
Estate Development

The
Company is capitalizing on the opportunity to develop commercial and residential assets on its existing and recently acquired properties.
The cost to acquire existing for-sale assets currently exceeds the replacement costs, thus creating the opportunity for development and
redevelopment of the land that the Company currently owns. The Company has developed, or is in the process of developing, assets that
have an initial development cost exceeding $100,000,000, primarily relating to the Center53 Development and multiple single family residential
development projects. The Company plans to continue its development endeavors based upon its assessment of the market demand.

7

Center53
Development

Center53
Development is an office development project comprising nearly 20 acres of land that is currently owned by the Company in the central
valley of Salt Lake City. At final completion, the multi-year phased development is expected to create a campus atmosphere and include
nearly one million square-feet of office space in five buildings, ranging from four to eleven stories, and will be serviced by three
parking structures with approximately 4,000 stalls. In 2015, the Company broke ground and commenced development on the first phase which
included a six-story building of nearly 200,000 square feet and a parking garage with 748 parking stalls. The first phase of the project
was completed in July 2017 and is currently 93% leased. The second phase of the project began in March 2020 and includes a second six-story
building of nearly 221,000 square feet and a parking garage with approximately 870 stalls. The Company began its occupancy of a portion
of the building in October 2021 and the remainder of the building is currently 100% leased. The Company plans to initiate future phases
of the Center53 Development for additional Class A office space in the central valley of Salt Lake City.

Regulation

The
Company’s insurance subsidiaries are subject to comprehensive regulations in the jurisdictions in which they do business under
statutes and regulations administered by state insurance commissioners. Such regulation relates to, among other things, prior approval
of the acquisition of a controlling interest in an insurance company; standards of solvency which must be met and maintained; licensing
of insurers and their agents; nature of and limitations on investments; deposits of securities for the benefit of policyholders; approval
of policy forms and premium rates; periodic examinations of the affairs of insurance companies; annual and other reports required to
be filed on the financial condition of insurers or for other purposes; and requirements regarding aggregate reserves for life policies
and annuity contracts, policy claims, unearned premiums, and other matters. The Company’s insurance subsidiaries are subject to
this type of regulation in any state in which they conduct relevant business. Such regulations may cause unforeseen costs and operational
restrictions, and delay implementation of the Company’s business plans.

The
Company’s life insurance subsidiaries are currently subject to regulations in Utah, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas under insurance
holding company legislation, and other states where applicable. Generally, intercompany transfers of assets and dividend payments from
insurance subsidiaries are subject to prior notice of approval from the relevant state insurance department when they are deemed “extraordinary”
under relevant state law. The insurance subsidiaries are required, under state insurance laws, to file detailed annual reports with the
supervisory agencies in each of the states in which they do business. Their business and accounts are also subject to examination by
these agencies every three to five years. The Company’s life insurance subsidiaries completed their last examinations in 2021 and
2022 for the period ending December 31, 2020 and the resulting final examination reports were approved by the insurance departments and
are public records. Security National Life, First Guaranty, Kilpatrick, Southern Security, and Trans-Western are currently under examination
by the insurance departments for the years 2021-2024.

The
Texas Department of Banking also audits pre-need insurance policies that are issued in the state of Texas. Pre-need policies include
the life and annuity products sold as the funding mechanism for funeral plans through funeral homes by Security National agents. The
Company is required to send the Texas Department of Banking an annual report that summarizes the number of policies in force and the
face amount or death benefit for each policy. This annual report is also required to indicate the number of new policies issued for that
year, all death claims paid that year, and all premiums received.

The
Company’s cemetery and mortuary subsidiaries are subject to the Federal Trade Commission’s comprehensive funeral industry
rules and to state regulations in the various states where such operations are domiciled. The morticians must be licensed by the respective
state in which they provide their services. Similarly, the mortuaries and cemeteries are governed and licensed by state statutes and
city ordinances in Utah, California, and New Mexico. The subsidiaries are required to keep annual reports on file including financial
information concerning the number of spaces sold and, where applicable, funds provided to the Endowment Care Trust Fund. Licenses are
issued annually based on such reports. The cemeteries maintain city or county licenses where they conduct business.

8

The
Company’s mortgage subsidiaries are subject to the rules and regulations of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD), and to various state licensing acts and regulations and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). These regulations, among
other things, specify minimum capital requirements; procedures for loan origination and underwriting, licensing of brokers and loan officers
and quality review audits and specify the fees that can be charged to borrowers. Each year, the Company is required to have an audit
completed for its mortgage subsidiary by an independent registered public accounting firm to verify compliance with the relevant regulations.
In addition to the government regulations, the Company must meet loan requirements, and underwriting guidelines of various investors
who purchase the loans.

Income
Taxes

The
Company’s insurance subsidiaries, Security National Life, First Guaranty and Kilpatrick are taxed under the Life Insurance Company
Tax Act of 1984. Under the act, life insurance companies are taxed at standard corporate rates on life insurance company taxable income.
Life insurance company taxable income is gross income less general business deductions and reserves for future policyholder benefits
(with modifications). Under The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the “Tax Act”), December 31, 2017 policyholder surplus account balances
result in taxable income over a period of eight years.

Security
National Life, First Guaranty and Kilpatrick calculate their life insurance taxable income after establishing a provision representing
a portion of the costs of acquisition of such life insurance business. The effect of the provision is that a certain percentage of the
Company’s premium income is characterized as deferred expenses and recognized over a five or ten-year period. The Tax Act changed
this recognition period for amounts deferred after December 31, 2017 to a five or fifteen-year period.

The
Company’s non-life insurance company subsidiaries are taxed in general under the regular corporate tax provisions. The Company’s
subsidiaries Southern Security and Trans-Western are regulated as life insurance companies but do not meet the Internal Revenue Code
definition of a life insurance company, so they are taxed as insurance companies other than life insurance companies.

Competition

The
life insurance industry is highly competitive. There are approximately 700 legal reserve life insurance companies in business in the
United States. These insurance companies differentiate themselves through marketing techniques, product features, pricing, and customer
service. The Company’s insurance subsidiaries compete with many insurance companies, many of which have greater financial resources,
longer business histories, and more diversified lines of insurance products than the Company. In addition, such companies generally have
larger sales forces. Further, the Company competes with mutual insurance companies which may have a competitive advantage because all
profits accrue to policyholders. Because the Company is smaller by industry standards and lacks broad diversification of risk, it may
be more vulnerable to losses than larger, better-established companies. The Company believes that its policies and rates for the markets
it serves are generally competitive.

The
cemetery and mortuary industry are highly competitive. In the Utah, California, and New Mexico markets where the Company competes, there
are several cemeteries and mortuaries which have longer business histories, more established positions in the community, and stronger
financial positions than the Company. In addition, some of the cemeteries with which the Company must compete for sales are owned by
municipalities and, as a result, can offer lower prices than can the Company. The Company bears the cost of a pre-need sales program
that is not incurred by those competitors which do not have a pre-need sales force. The Company believes that its products and prices
are generally competitive with those in the industry.

The
mortgage industry is highly competitive with many mortgage companies and banks in the same geographic area in which the Company is operating.
The mortgage industry in general is sensitive to changes in interest rates and the refinancing market is particularly vulnerable to changes
in interest rates.

Seasonality

The
Company’s business is generally not subject to seasonal fluctuations.

9

Human
Capital Management

As
of December 31, 2025, the Company employed 1,035 full-time and 208 part-time employees. Of the full-time employees, 652 were employed
by the mortgage segment, 386 by the life insurance segment, and 205 by the cemetery and mortuary segment. The Company requires monthly
acknowledgement of its anti-discrimination and anti-harassment policies and communicates to its employees how to report concerns that
relate to their employment experience.

Employee
Benefits

All
eligible employees may elect coverage under the Company’s group health (including health savings and flexible spending), retirement,
supplemental life and voluntary benefit programs. As of December 31, 2025, 677 employees had elected to participate in the Company’s
group health insurance plans.

The
Company sponsors a 401(k) retirement plan for each business segment. These retirement plans qualify under section 401(k) of the Internal
Revenue Code and, if approved by the Company’s Board of Directors, the Company makes a matching contribution in Company stock based
on the employee’s contribution amount.

The
Company provides other time off benefits such as paid sick time and paid vacation time. The Company provides discounts on certain services
provided by the Company to its employees. Additionally, the Company offers an employee assistance program that provides 24/7 counseling
services for employees who may be facing challenges outside of the workplace.

Available
Information

The
Company’s internet address is www.securitynational.com. The Company’s investor relations website is www.investor.securitynational.com
and the Company promptly makes available on this website, free of charge, the reports that it files or furnishes with the Securities
and Exchange Commission.