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Top Tips For Buying Life Insurance

 

Buy life insurance when your young and healthy.

 

What you should know about your insurance company

Different companies offer different products.
Check your insurance companies security rating, it rates the financial security of the insurance company. The security of a company depends on how it is managed, supervised, and controlled.
Several independent rating organizations monitor the financial strength of insurance companies.

A.M. Best Co. ambest.com
Moody’s Investor Service Inc. moodys.com
Standard & Poor’s standardandpoor.com
Duff & Phelps dcrco.com
Weiss Research weissratings.com

 

What to do if a company turns you down

If a company turns you down for a policy, try another company. Companies use different methods and factors to decide whether or not to insure you, one company might reject you while another company may accept you.

Check on group life insurance. Some group plans do not require medical exams or health histories.
Insurance companies can – within certain limits – select those individuals they want to insure. However, they are not free to turn down coverage without a valid reason. By law insurers cannot refuse insurance to anyone based on:
sex, marital status, race, creed, color and national origin
It’s also against the law to deny coverage to domestic violence victims. And it’s illegal to refuse people with a sensory, mental, or physical problem – unless the company can prove statistically that someone is more likely to file a claim.

 

Understanding life insurance premiums


Life insurance premium are based on several factors:
Age, Health problems, Occupation, Hobbies, Habits and Other circumstances that may reduce your life span, such as a bad driving record or participating in dangerous activities. They also factor in expenses they expect to pay regarding your coverage, such as sales charges, underwriting and administration costs, and interest the company expects to earn from investing your premiums.


What you should know about life insurance policies

Your policy is a legal contract between you and the insurance company. This contract spells out:
• The rights and duties of you and the company
• How much and how often you pay
• The benefits you are entitled to receive
• The circumstances under which the policy will pay benefits
 

The best insurance policy is the one that best fits your needs. you should review your coverage on an annual basis to make sure your policy is current and accurate to your needs since your needs may change over time.

 

 

 

 

Term life and cash value life insurance

Term and cash value insurance are the two basic types of life insurance that companies offer in various forms.
Term insurance
Term insurance gets its name because it protects you for a specific “term”—usually a year or a limited number of years. You have to pay more for it as you get older because your risk of dying increases with age. Term insurance does not have a cash value and you cannot cash it in. Once the term ends, the policy no longer covers you. If the policy is renewable, you may buy it for another term at a rate guaranteed in the policy, without providing health information and some other proof of insurability, such as a driving record. However, the renewed policy will usually cost more. Over time, it may be too costly to renew.
Term insurance is well suited to fill a temporary need for increased insurance. If you leave one job for another, you may not have group life insurance coverage through your employer for a short time. Term insurance offers an easy purchase to bridge such a gap. It is also provides you with an option to quickly supplement an existing whole life policy with additional coverage.
Cash value life
For this type of insurance, you pay higher premiums at the beginning of the policy. The company uses part of your premium to set up an account under your policy with a cash value that you may use in a variety of ways. For example:
• You may borrow against a policy’s cash value by taking out a loan. If you don’t pay back the loan and the interest on it, the company will subtract the amount you owe from the benefits when you die. If you cancel the policy, the company will also subtract the loan balance from the cash value you receive
• You can use the cash value to pay an overdue premium on the policy
• You can use the cash value to increase your income in retirement or to provide for other financial needs. However, to build up this cash value, you must pay higher premiums in the early years of the policy
Whole life, universal life, and variable life
These are all considered types of cash value insurance. For whole life and universal life, the life insurance company invests your cash value as a general asset of the company. The interest the company credits to your cash value is based on its earnings.
Whole life
This is the traditional form of cash value life insurance. Also referred to as “ordinary life” or “straight life,” whole life insurance provides coverage for your entire lifetime.

 

Other life insurance policy options
The following are other popular types of life insurance:
Group life insurance
Typically purchased one year at a time, group life insurance gives you very little control over the conditions of the coverage. You buy group life through an association of individuals. For example, an association of individuals affiliated with an employer, labor union or credit union. In Washington state, if you leave a group life plan or your employer drops the plan, the law requires group life insurance to allow you to convert to permanent whole life insurance coverage.
The advantages to group life include:
• Group life insurance may cost less than individually purchased life policies
• Employers may choose to subsidize part of the cost as a fringe benefit for their employees
• It usually doesn’t require a medical exam or health history
The disadvantages to group life include:
• It does not typically guarantee premiums
• It does not typically guarantee a renewable policy
• Group life coverage only applies to members of the group
• If you leave the group or drop your association membership, your coverage ends — unless you convert the policy to private insurance at a higher cost
Convertible policies
This type of policy starts out as term life insurance and then converts to a cash value life insurance policy. Young people who want financial security for their new families, but cannot afford cash value life insurance, may choose a convertible term insurance policy. These policies give you the option to convert your coverage to cash value life insurance for a limited time—without providing health information and some other proof of insurability and at the insurer’s current premium rates. Premium rates start fairly low and then rise after you convert. When you shop for term insurance, look for policies that are both renewable and convertible.

Joint life insurance
When a husband and wife or business associates need life insurance, it is often cheaper to buy a joint life insurance policy instead of two or more separate policies. While this type of insurance saves on administrative costs, the policy usually only pays the death benefit on the first to die. However, some companies issue “second or last to die” policies for estate planning.
Family insurance
This is basically a whole life insurance policy on a parent with smaller amounts of additional term insurance on other family members.
Final expense insurance
Also known as “burial policies” or “senior life insurance packages,” these small policies cover or pre-pay a person’s funeral costs. Historically, some of these policies had a very high price compared to the death benefit. In response to consumer complaints, Washington created the high-priced life insurance regulation.
This regulation includes a special formula that bans companies from marketing certain high-priced life insurance policies with small death benefits. Companies cannot sell life insurance polices in Washington when the amount paid into them quickly exceeds the possible benefit. For example, during the first 10 years of the policy, the death benefit must be greater than the sum of the premiums compounded at five percent interest. Otherwise, you would be better off with your money in a savings account.
Please note: This rule does not apply to policies with a death benefit of $25,000 or more.

Waiver of premium
If you become seriously ill or injured and cannot work, you may not be able to pay your premium. A waiver of premium benefit lets you waive paying your premiums as long as you remain disabled (according the definition in your policy). You must remain disabled at least six months to collect this modest disability income benefit. You can usually add this life insurance extra to your policy for only a few cents more per month per thousand dollars of insurance coverage.
Accidental death benefit
The industry also refers to this life insurance extra, as “double, triple, or additional” indemnity. If an accident causes your death, this life insurance extra allows your beneficiaries to receive double, triple, or even more of your policy’s death benefit value.
Accelerated life insurance benefit
This permits life insurance companies to include policy language that allows for an early, discounted benefit payment to terminally ill policyholders. A doctor must certify that policyholders have less than 24 months to live.
What you should know about trading in policies
It’s become more common for policyholders to use their life insurance cash values in various financial actions. Some people borrow the base value of their policy to take advantage of the low interest rate. Some cash their policies in and put the cash in higher interest accounts while making other plans for their insurance needs. Others may look into new developments in the life insurance market, such as policies that include investments or variable interest options.
Be careful if you are tempted to use your life insurance coverage as described in these examples. Your individual and family situation will help you decide if any of these options will work for you.
If you decide to change your coverage, you should never drop your old policy until the new one takes effect, and you have reviewed it. Ask your agent or broker for complete disclosure on any new policy you are thinking about buying.
If an agent or broker suggests you exchange a policy for a new one, ask for a comparison of the new offering and the old policy. Be sure to get it in writing before you agree to the transaction.

Be aware that any replacement policy may contain new restrictions such as a new two-year suicide clause, and may allow the company to revoke your policy for false statements on your application. Replacement policies may also include important new surrender penalties if you wish to cash them in. A surrender penalty is a financial penalty you pay for canceling a policy or contract early. Older people should be wary of trading in current policies for new ones that require a substantial new surrender penalty.
If you trade in policies, by law you must receive a “Notice Regarding Replacement of Insurance.” This will help you make the best decision when you’re thinking about replacing an existing life insurance policy. The agent or broker should give you a completed replacement notice at the time he or she takes your applications for the new insurance policy.
The “free-look” rule also applies to consumers who exchange one policy for another. (For an explanation of the free-look rule, see page 2).
What you should know about death claims
The company’s home office usually handles life insurance claims. Your beneficiary will need to notify the company and request a claim form. Your beneficiary should expect to provide the company’s claim department with:
• A completed claim form
• A certified copy of the death certificate
• The life insurance policy or a lost policy affidavit
Your beneficiary should keep copies of the documents he or she sends to the company.
Typically, beneficiaries will get a death-claim settlement from the company once he or she provides due proof of the policyholder’s death, and turns in the policy. Due proof is what the company normally requires to establish that death occurred. Your beneficiary can provide due proof with one of the following:
• Death certificate from the Office of Vital Statistics
• Coroner’s report
• Attending doctor’s statement
• Hospital certificate of death

Individual policies
To ensure prompt settlements, insurers must pay your beneficiary no less than 8 percent interest starting from the date of death. An additional 3 percent is payable on those claims not settled within 90 days of when the beneficiary provided proof of death.
What your beneficiary can expect
In most instances, your beneficiary will receive the death benefit amount of the policy. Although, the insurer may adjust the amount depending on the specifics of your coverage. For example, any loan against the cash value of the policy and any interest due on such a loan may reduce the face amount. Also, adding any premium payments made in advance, or subtracting premiums due may adjust the face value. For a dividend paying policy, the insurer adds accrued dividends to the death benefit amount of the policy.
Settlement options
Beneficiaries normally have several options. They may choose to:
• Receive the policy proceeds in cash as soon as the claim is settled
• Leave the proceeds with the company, while it earns interest, until they decide what to do
• Convert the proceeds into monthly income
For example, companies usually offer beneficiaries several options to receive payment. One method draws the amount down in equal monthly payments over a fixed time, such as 10 years. Another method places the proceeds in a life annuity, which will pay a monthly amount for as long as your beneficiary lives. Yet another method provides a joint annuity—one that pays as long as your two beneficiaries live.
Your policy must include a section explaining these settlement options.
Options for seriously ill people
Viaticals
Many individuals who suffer serious, terminal illnesses realize one of their most valuable assets is a life insurance policy. However, only the beneficiary has access to this asset after the policyholder passes away. Viaticals give the policyholder access to this asset prior to his or her death. Viatical companies arrange the “sale” of life insurance benefits as an investment. Typically, an investor agrees to buy the life insurance policy of a seriously ill person by paying the person an amount less than the benefit. The seriously ill person receives much needed cash, and the buyer receives the full amount of the benefit. This benefit is payable once the former policyholder dies.

Other options
If you own a cash value policy, you could take a loan from the policy to help pay expenses. Also, if your policy contains an accelerated benefits option for catastrophic illness, you may qualify for a discounted payment from the face amount of the policy.
 

Top 10 Life Insurance Cautions
1. Beware if it sounds too good to be true. It probably is NOT true.
2. Never sign a form that leaves blank spaces—even if the agent or broker assures you it is merely a formality.
3. If someone offers you a chance to turn in a small policy for a larger one without paying substantially more, WATCH OUT!
4. Don’t drop your old policy until your new policy takes effect.
5. Save every piece of paper explaining your coverage and your policy. Keep them on file with your policy. (If the agent used a laptop computer, insist on a hard copy version of what he or she showed you.)
6. Never buy coverage you don’t understand. It is the responsibility of the agent, broker or company to explain your coverage in terms you can understand.
7. Don’t let someone pressure you. You do NOT face any deadlines.
8. Don’t buy life insurance portrayed as a “pension plan” or a “retirement fund.” Life insurance is NOT a pension plan.
9. Be careful of any life insurance plan that promises “vanishing premiums” or guarantees you a premium-free policy over a specific period.
10. Never ignore notices from the insurance company even though your agent tells you it’s a “mistake” and nothing to worry about.

 

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