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Now Is the Time to Pick Up Low-Cost Life Insurance
If you need
life insurance, now may be the time to buy it. Insurance
premiums are expected to drop 4 percent this year,
following a five percent decline last year, according
to the Insurance Information Institute, New York.
In fact, premiums are less than half of what they
were a decade ago.
There are two
basic types of life insurance policies that have lowered
their premiums: terms and permanent.
Term insurance
is basic coverage. You pay a premium and just get
life insurance for a specific period, typically from
one to 20 years. Upon the renewal of a term insurance
policy, though, you'll pay a higher premium because
you're older.
Permanent insurance,
on the other hand, provides both insurance coverage
and a savings account, known as the “cash value.”
Cash value policies include whole life, universal
life, variable whole life, and variable universal
life. Cash value insurance is permanent protection.
You lock into a premium when you purchase the contract.
Universal policies let you make flexible premium payments.
Why are life
insurance rates dropping? People are living longer.
The longer you live, the lower your insurance premiums.
Life insurance rates are dropping because death rates
for the 25 to 44 age group — the primary purchasers
of life insurance — have decreased significantly over
the past 10 years, according to Weisbart. In 1996,
the death rate per 100,000 for the 25-to-44 year-old
age group was 177.8. By 2004, it had dropped to 161.8,
based on National Vital Statistics Reports preliminary
data. That represents nearly a 10 percent drop in
the death rate in less than a decade for the prime
insurance-buying ages.
The drop in
insurance rates can represent a substantial savings.
The annual premium for a 40-year-old male nonsmoker
buying a $500,000, 20-year level term life insurance
policy in 2007 would run $615 if he qualifies as a
“standard” risk and $340 if he meets the more stringent
requirements of a “preferred” risk. Rates for women,
younger people and for larger amounts of insurance
would be lower.
Premium rates
for traditional whole life, universal life, and variable
universal life insurance also are lower. Today, someone
age 35 would pay about $8 per $1,000 of coverage for
permanent protection. Ten years ago it was more like
$12 per $1,000 of coverage.
With rates
lower than they ever have been, parents might reassess
the amount of life insurance they carry, and consider
purchasing more. For example, it takes, calculated
in the most simplistic of ways, a $500,000 death benefit
to pay a widow $2,500 a month for 17 years. Yet, in
2004, according to LIMRA International, Hartford,
Conn., the average 25 year-old to 34 year-old adult
with life insurance had only $145,000; the average
35 to 44 year-old adult had only $323,000 of life
insurance.
So what should
you do if you're sitting on a higher rate term insurance
or cash value policy? Have an experienced life insurance
agent conduct an insurance needs analysis to determine
how much coverage you need. On average, you need about
five to eight times your wages to be adequately protected.
Most life insurance
companies charge lower rates for larger amounts of
insurance. So buying one larger policy rather than
keeping a smaller one and starting a second policy
should further lower your premium. Rates often drop
at the $250,000, $500,000, and $1 million levels.
Do note on the application that you plan to replace
an existing policy. And, don't drop the existing policy
until the new one is in place.
The drawbacks:
If your age, occupation or health has changed, you
may not be able to get lower premiums from another
insurer. You can check term insurance rates at Web
sites such as www.accuqote.com
or www.selectquote.com.
There are more
factors to consider when switching a whole life, universal
or universal variable insurance policy. In addition,
consider:
- Although you can do a 1035 tax-free exchange to
move the cash value from your old policy to a new
policy, you'll pay commissions and other insurance
costs on the new policy. This can mean more than
50 percent of your premium in the first year and
other commissions on the cash value that is moved
to the new company.
- If the total of all prior premiums is less than
the cash value in the policy you are replacing,
you will owe income taxes on the difference. A 1035
tax-free exchange should be considered in this situation.
- Usually, if a cash value policy has been in force
for seven to 10 years, with a quality carrier and
you are not changing the type of underlying investment
from a fixed portfolio to a variable portfolio,
it is unwise to make a change.
- Life insurance policies are incontestable after
they have been in force for two years regardless
of any errors or misstatements on the initial application.
Replacing an existing policy with a new policy will
start the incontestability period over again.
- Any policy loans on your old policy will have
to be repaid.
Tip: Always
check the financial strength of the insurance company
you are considering. The strongest companies are rated
A++ and A+ by A.M. Best and AAA by Standard &
Poor's.
March
2007 – This column was authored in cooperation with
Financial Planning Association.
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