Entries tagged Term Life Insurance

Decisions as you get older

Published: Feb 20th, 2010 | Author: admin Add Comment

As you get older, the mortgage is paid off and the kids have grown up and left the nest, there’s a temptation to switch off. You feel you have done all the heavy lifting. The pension will be coming soon when you retire… What’s wrong with this picture? Well, the majority of people were trading in property and, when the bubble burst, they are looking at negative housing equity and the threat of foreclosure. Even those who stayed in their own homes over the years, often borrowed heavily against them. With the recession, all those investments in the retirement fund have lost their shine. Unemployment is a more real threat to middle and upper class families. Children seem to be staying in the family home for longer. And all this at a time when life expectancy is increasing. Ten years ago, people might have dropped their term life insurance policies and found themselves with more disposable income. Now the decision is more difficult.

With the credit crunch, the pressure is on to keep paying the mortgage, reduce the outstanding household debts and put food on the table. Those of you with permanent or cash-value life insurance policies have a slightly easier path to follow. Premiums will be fixed but, if you stop paying, the policies may remain valid. The decisions are to:

  • keep paying, which builds up the investment value and protects the family by maintaining the death benefit;
  • stop paying and leave the cash value untouched;
  • withdraw or borrow some of the cash value; or
  • cancel the policy which usually involves a big tax bill.

If a term life insurance policy is falling due for renewal, here’s how the choice looks: if you renew, the premiums will be higher because, suddenly, you’re older; but, if you let the policy expire, your family could be hit hard if you die unexpectedly. Many of you may have bought term life cover when you were younger. Perhaps you thought you would convert to permanent policies or simply drop the cover when your children had grown up. Now that retirement funds are shrinking, it’s time to take another look at term insurance.

Allowing for inflation, the premiums have actually been falling over the last ten years as life expectancy has been improving. Go back fifty years and only a small percentage of people lived beyond seventy. Now, many people live into their eighties and beyond. This has prompted competition among companies who offer cheap life insurance to attract business from older people. As long as you are physically fit, you are likely to find the rates little changed from the ten, fifteen or twenty year term policy that is due to expire. Naturally, there will be a health exam to ensure you will live a reasonable number of years before a claim arises, but the option to continue a term policy or to convert to a permanent policy are better than you might imagine. This is a good time to start talking to the life insurance companies to see what your options are.

Term Life Insurance

Published: Feb 4th, 2010 | Author: admin Add Comment

Most of people in US know that there are two forms of insuring one’s life: term and whole. And as you can guess from the name, whole life policies provide continuous coverage for a person’s entire life, while term policies cover only for a specified period of time.

Today, term policies are the most widespread form of life coverage due to their simplicity, clearness and relative cheapness. And the fact that you can purchase multiple policies and tailor them according to your current insurance needs makes term insurance the best option for meeting short-term goals. For example, you have to pay off a mortgage after some time or make sure your kids go to college when it’s time. And term insurance policies can give you the required financing after the term expires.

Most insurance companies provide term coverage for specified periods of time, which usually range from 5 to 30 years. Besides, most term insurance policies are renewable so that you can continue having coverage for as long as you need. Get life insurance quotes from different providers to see what your options are and get the most competitive rates, because they can vary significantly from one company to another.

Term insurance features

  • Initially low costs. Term policies are cheaper than whole life policies because they cover lower degrees of risk and do not provide additional benefits of continuous insurance. Whole life policies are often used as a form of investment, while term policies do not provide such added benefits and thus are cheaper.
  • Adjustable premiums. Most term life insurance policies have pre-set premiums over the entire insurance term. They may be adjusted due to various circumstances but never exceeding specified limits, which are stated in the policy.
  • Renewability. When the term if your life insurance expires you may choose to prolong the policy above this limit or receive the policy benefits. If you choose to renew your policy it will be prolonged for a specified period of time and your rates will likely be higher than you’ve paid initially, because the insurance company will take your current age and health conditions for calculating the rates, not the ones you’ve had when signing the initial policy.
  • Conversion. This feature allows a term insurance policy to be converted to a continuous insurance policy while the term is in effect. Not all companies offer such an option, but it is most likely that your company will allow this. If you’re looking into this option before getting the actual policy it is best to learn whether the company allows it in the first place instead of looking for another company in case you want this option and your company doesn’t provide it.

So if you’re looking for cheap life insurance, term policies are the best way to get good coverage for a reasonable price. Besides, the features you get with a term policy give you a high degree of flexibility if compared to whole life products. However, if you want to have even more benefits and money distribution options with your policy it is best to look for a continuous insurance product. But be ready to pay way more than for term insurance because the added benefits have their price tag too.