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Life
Insurance
2260 Gulf to
Bay Blvd. Clearwater, FL 33765 Phone: 727-669-4777 Fax:
727-669-8407
Life Insurance Coverage
It's not for those that die,
it's for the ones that live. There are many different kinds of Life Insurance.
What are the principal types of life insurance?
There
are two major types of life insurance - Term and whole life. Whole life is
sometimes called permanent life insurance, and it encompasses several
subcategories, including traditional whole life, and universal life. In 2003, about 6.4 million individual life
insurance policies bought were term and about 7.1 million were whole
life.
Universal Life
A flexible premium policy that combines
protection against premature death with a type of savings vehicle, known as a
cash value account, that typically earns a money market rate of interest. Death
benefits can be changed during the life of the policy within limits, generally
subject to a medical examination. Once funds accumulate in the cash value
account, the premium can be paid at any time but the policy will lapse if there
isn't enough money to cover annual mortality charges and administrative
costs.
Term Life
A form of life insurance that covers the
insured person for a certain period of time, the "term" that is specified in the
policy. It pays a benefit to a designated beneficiary only when the insured dies
within that specified period which can be one, five, 10 or even 20 years. Term
life policies are renewable but premiums increase with age.
Key Person
Life
Insurance on the life or health of a key individual whose services
are essential to the continuing success of a business and whose death or
disability could cause the firm a substantial financial loss.
Buy / Sell
Life
An agreement among part-owners of a business which says that under
stated conditions, i.e., disability or death, the person withdrawing from the
business or his heirs are legally obligated to sell their interest to the
remaining part-owners, and the remaining part-owners are legally obligated to
buy at a price fixed in the agreement.
First-to-Die Life
As the name
implies, "first-to-die" or "joint-life" insurance policies pay out the face
amount when the first named insured dies. This reduces the cost of paying
premiums on two separate policies, when the insurance proceeds are most needed
when only the first insured dies.
Split Dollar Life
This agreement
splits the premiums, cash values and death benefits of a life insurance policy
between two parties. The policy holder contributes a gift (payment) each year to
increase the economic benefit. It is important to have as it free's up dollars
otherwise paid currently in gift taxes for use in other more productive ways
(ie. investments).
Term
Term Insurance is the simplest form of
life insurance. It pays only if death occurs during the term of the policy,
which is usually from one to 30 years. Most term policies have no other benefit
provisions.
There are two basic types of term life insurance policies -
level term and decreasing term.
Level term means that the death
benefit stays the same throughout the duration of the policy.
Decreasing term
means that the death benefit drops, usually in one-year increments, over the
course of the policy's term. In 2003, virtually all (97 percent) of the term
life insurance bought was level term.
Whole Life/Permanent
Whole life
or permanent insurance pays a death benefit whenever you die - even if you
live to 100! There are two major types of whole life or permanent life insurance,
traditional whole life, and universal life, and there
are variations within each type.
In the case of traditional whole life, both
the death benefit and the premium are designed to stay the same (level)
throughout the life of the policy. The cost per $1,000 of benefit increases as
the insured person ages, and it obviously gets very high when the insured lives
to 80 and beyond. The insurance company could charge a premium that increases
each year, but that would make it very hard for most people to afford life
insurance at advanced ages. So they keep the premium level by charging a premium
that, in the early years, is higher than what's needed to pay claims, investing
that money, and then using it to supplement the level premium to help pay the
cost of life insurance for older people.
By law, when these "overpayments" reach a
certain amount, they must be available to the policyowner as a cash value if he
or she decides not to continue with the original plan. The cash value is an
alternative, not an additional, benefit under the policy.
What are the types of term insurance
policies?
Term insurance comes in two basic varieties - level term
and decreasing term. These days, almost everyone buys level term insurance. The
terms "level" and "decreasing" refer to the death benefit amount during the term
of the policy. A level term policy pays the same benefit amount if death occurs
at any point during the term.
Common types of level term
are:
yearly- (or annually-) renewable term
5-year renewable
term
10-year term
15-year term
20-year
term
25-year term
30-year term
term to a specified
age (usually 65)
Yearly renewable term, once popular, is no longer a top seller.
The most popular type is now 20-year term. Most companies will not sell term
insurance to an applicant for a term that ends past his or her 80th birthday.
If a policy is "renewable," that means it continues in force for an
additional term or terms, up to a specified age, even if the health of the
insured (or other factors) would cause him or her to be rejected if he or she
applied for a new life insurance policy.
Generally, the premium for the
policy is based on the insured person's age and health at the policy's start,
and the premium remains the same (level) for the length of the term. So,
premiums for 5-year renewable term can be level for 5 years, then to a new rate
reflecting the new age of the insured, and so on every five years. Some longer
term policies will guarantee that the premium will not increase during the term;
others don't make that guarantee, enabling the insurance company to raise the
rate during the policy's term.
Some term policies are convertible. This means
that the policy's owner has the right to change it into a permanent type of life
insurance without additional evidence of insurability.
"Return of
Premium"
In most types of term insurance, including homeowners and auto
insurance, if you haven't had a claim under the policy by the time it expires,
you get no refund of the premium. Your premium bought the protection that you
had but didn't need, and you've received fair value. Some term life insurance
consumers have been unhappy at this outcome, so some insurers have created term
life with a "return of premium" feature. The premiums for the insurance with
this feature are often significantly higher than for policies without it, and
they generally require that you keep the policy in force to its term or else you
forfeit the return of premium benefit. Some policies will return the base
premium but not the extra premium (for the return benefit), and others will
return both.
What are the different types of permanent
policies?
Whole or ordinary life
This is the most common
type of permanent insurance policy. It offers a death benefit along with a
savings account. If you pick this type of life insurance policy, you are
agreeing to pay a certain amount in premiums on a regular basis for a specific
death benefit. The savings element would grow based on dividends the company
pays to you.
Universal or adjustable life
This type of policy
offers you more flexibility than whole life insurance. You may be able to
increase the death benefit, if you pass a medical examination. The savings
vehicle (called a cash value account) generally earns a money market rate of
interest. After money has accumulated in your account, you will also have the
option of altering your premium payments - providing there is enough money in
your account to cover the costs. This can be a useful feature if your economic
situation has suddenly changed. However, you would need to keep in mind that if
you stop or reduce your premiums and the saving accumulation gets used up, the
policy might lapse and your life insurance coverage will end. You should check
with your agent before deciding not to make premium payments for extended
periods because you might not have enough cash value to pay the monthly charges
to prevent a policy lapse.
Why should I purchase
permanent insurance?
A permanent life policy provides lifelong
insurance protection. The policy pays a death benefit if you die tomorrow or if
you live to be a hundred. There is also a savings element that will grow on a
tax-deferred basis and may become substantial over time. Because of the savings
element, premiums are generally higher for permanent than for term insurance.
However, the premium in a permanent policy remains the same, while term can go
up substantially every time you renew it.
There are a number of different
types of permanent insurance policies, such as whole (ordinary) life, and universal
life. In a permanent policy, the
cash value is different from its face value amount. The face amount is the money
that will be paid at death. Cash value is the amount of money available to you.
There are a number of ways that you can use this cash savings. For instance, you
can take a loan against it or you can surrender the policy before you die to
collect the accumulated savings.
There are unique features to a permanent
policy such as:
You can lock in premiums when you purchase the policy. By
purchasing a permanent policy, the premium will not increase as you age or if
your health status changes.
The policy will accumulate cash
savings.
Depending on the policy, you may be able to withdraw some of the
money. You also may have these options:
Use the cash value to pay premiums. If
unexpected expenses occur, you can stop or reduce your premiums. The cash value
in the policy can be used toward the premium payment to continue your current
insurance protection - providing there is enough money accumulated.
Borrow from the
insurance company using the cash value in your life insurance as collateral.
Like all loans, you will ultimately need to repay the insurer with interest.
Otherwise, the policy may lapse or your beneficiaries will receive a reduced
death benefit. However, unlike loans from most financial institutions, the loan
is not dependent on credit checks or other restrictions.