
LIFE INSURANCE BASICS
You need life insurance if anyone depends on your lost income. It solves many
problems in both personal and business situations.
Personal needs:
If you are a young parent, you may need life insurance on your own life to enable
a surviving spouse to raise the children. When you are older, you may need life
insurance if you are financially responsible for an aging parent or want to
provide funds to take care of final expenses, debts or taxes.
A rough rule of thumb suggests buying protection equivalent to FIVE TO EIGHT
TIMES YOUR ANNUAL INCOME. Your needs may vary according to your financial assets
and liabilities.
Life insurance can solve your heirs immediate and long-term needs.
- Immediate needs would include: funeral expenses, unpaid medical bills,
debt and taxes, as well as the time to readjust to a new life-style.
- Long-term it will help provide: for the maintenance and care of a
disabled child or elderly parent, college expenses and, in general, providing
the means to your heirs to live the life to which they are accustomed.
Business Needs:
Life insurance is often the solution to:
- Replace a key person and provide the funds to cover the costs of locating
and training a replacement.
- To fund Buy/Sell agreements.
- To provide collateral for business loans, etc.
There are two types of Life Insurance: Term and Permanent
Term Insurance
It provides protection for a specified period of time, typically from 10 to
30 years. It pays a death benefit only if you die during this term. Some policies
can be automatically renewed at the end of the coverage period, and some can
be converted to permanent insurance without need for a medical exam.
Advantages of term policies include:
More insurance for less money because premiums are lower than those for permanent
insurance, and you can afford to buy more coverage when you need it the most.
Specified periods of coverage make term insurance ideal for covering specific
short-term financial needs such as a college education or a mortgage loan.
Disadvantages of term policies include:
Premiums increase at each policy renewal date, becoming very expensive later
in life. There is no savings feature (cash value), only a death benefit if you
die while the policy is in force. You could outlive your coverage, because term
insurance is generally not renewable after age 70 or 75. State laws vary on
this issue, so you should check with your state department of insurance or your
insurance agent.
Permanent Insurance
It provides lifelong protection as long as you continue to pay premiums. The
premiums are based on your age at the time of purchase and generally remain
level; they do not increase with age. Because premiums remain level, permanent
insurance is more expensive than term insurance. But permanent insurance accumulates
cash value, which may be refundable upon surrender of the policy. While the
policy is in force, cash values can be borrowed against or used to pay premiums.
There are four basic types of permanent Insurance:
- Whole Life (sometimes also called life or ordinary life) has a fixed guaranteed
rate and develops guaranteed cash values.
- Universal Life has more flexibility. Within certain limits, you can change
the death benefit, the amount of premium and payment frequency. Unlike Whole
Life, this is an "interest driven" policy, which normally pays a minimum guaranteed
interest of 4% to 4.5%. If the interest rates are continuously low, additional
premiums may have to be paid to avoid a lapse of coverage.
- Variable Life has death benefits and cash values that vary with the performance
of an underlying portfolio of investments that you select. The death benefit
and cash value are not guaranteed. They can go down as well as up, although
there may be a guaranteed minimum death benefit.
- Variable Universal combines the premium and death benefit flexibility of
universal life with the investment flexibility and risk of variable life.
Key things you should know about life insurance:
- Life insurance proceeds are generally income tax free.
- The proceeds of many permanent life insurance policies can be used to ease
the financial burden of catastrophic illness, terminal illness or long-term
care. These "accelerated benefits" may be offered as part of the basic policy
or as a rider to an existing policy.
- As the holder of a permanent life insurance policy, you may borrow up to
the cash value at an interest rate (fixed or adjustable) stated in the policy.
Any unpaid interest is added to the loan. Any unpaid loan, including interest,
will be deducted from the death benefit.
- The cash value can be used to pay premiums for a period of time, keeping
the stated death benefit, or it can be used to purchase paid-up insurance
in a lesser amount with no further premiums due.
- In addition to naming a specific beneficiary to receive the proceeds of
your life insurance policy (permanent or term), you should name a secondary
or "contingent" beneficiary just in case you outlive the first beneficiary.
If there is no living beneficiary, the proceeds will be paid to your estate
and have to go through probate proceedings, resulting in a possible delay
before your family receives the money. If the proceeds go into the estate,
these proceeds may be subject to estate taxes.
- On all of the above policies, riders are available at an additional cost
to cover: disability waiver of premium, double indemnity for accidental death,
guaranteed purchase options, as well as spouse and child riders. Ask your agent about these riders.
Other Products Available:
Universal Life Insurance |
Mortgage Life Insurance | Individual Retirement
Accounts | Pensions and Profit Sharing Plans
| Group and Individual Health Pensions
For a quote please call 1-800-292-1127 or
click here
Please note we only write insurance in the State of Connecticut

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