Are You Insured?

Life Insurance

[subtitle]Too many Americans have no life insurance. Their loved ones may pay dearly for that choice.[/subtitle]

 

According to a recent Bankrate survey, 42% of Americans have no life insurance at all. They may not know that life insurance coverage has become much more affordable than it once was.

Many people ask if life insurance is really worth the cost; maybe you are among them. The simple answer to that question is yes. It can be stunningly cheap: a healthy, non-smoking man in his thirties may pay less than $45 a month for a $1 million 20-year term policy. Permanent life insurance costs more than term life insurance, but permanent life policies can build cash value over time; term policies cannot.

Life insurance is about managing risk, and if other people rely on you financially, you need to have it in place in case your passing puts them at financial risk. When a spouse or parent dies, there are financial matters to address: a sudden lack of income for a household, bills and mortgages or rent to pay, final expenses such as funeral or cremation costs, and the cost of children’s education. Without adequate life insurance coverage, a household is hard-pressed to meet these immediate, financially draining challenges.

Many growing families have inadequate life insurance coverage. The Bankrate survey discovered that 37% of parents with children under age 18 had no policy at all. Some younger families find coverage through group plans, but perhaps not enough: 32% of the survey respondents raising minor children said that the death benefits on their life insurance contracts were $100,000 or less.

The problem of inadequate coverage seems to plague households of all ages. A five-figure life insurance payout can pay for a funeral, but it will not offer much economic insulation to a family after a wage earner dies. Bankrate found that 47% of the Americans who have life insurance have policies with coverage amounts of $100,000 or lower. Twenty-one percent of Americans have policies with death benefits of $25,000 or lower.

How much coverage is adequate for you? Ideally, you should determine that with the help of an insurance professional. As a rough rule of thumb, the death benefit on a policy should be about 15 times your income. If you are considering a term life policy, the term should not end before your envisioned retirement age.

Life insurance can also be valuable while you are alive. A policy with cash value components may grow over time, either by a fixed amount per year or a variable amount as a result of the insurer directing some of the assets into underlying equity investments. (In such cases, it is also possible for the cash value to decline if the underlying investments do poorly.) After a while, you may be able to borrow against the cash value. Sometimes the payout amount on these types of policies can be adjusted as well as the size of the premiums. Of course, you must keep paying the premiums to keep any kind of permanent life or term life policy in force.

While you may decide you prefer one kind of policy over another, the important thing is to have coverage in place – not just to reassure yourself, but those you love. Life insurance can help a spouse or a family maintain financial equilibrium at a time when it is most needed.

Subscribe to our Newsletter

By subscribing to our mailing list you will always be updated with the latest news from us.  We never spam!

Our Post Archives

More Articles to Explore

Bad Money Habits
Behavior

Bad Money Habits to Break

Behaviors worth changing Do bad money habits constrain your financial progress? Many people fall into the same financial behavior patterns, year after year. If you

Read More »
Spending plans
Personal Finance

Retirees Should Have Spending Plans

[subtitle]Without such strategies, they can risk going through their savings too fast.[/subtitle]   Every day, articles appear urging people to save for retirement. These articles

Read More »
financial catastrophe
Personal Finance

Avoiding Financial Catastrophe

[subtitle]How can you prepare, financially, for a disaster?[/subtitle] Wildfires, hurricanes, terrorist attacks, floods, earthquakes … there are many disasters, both man-made and natural, that could

Read More »

get in touch

Weekly Newsletter

Get updates with our latest insights.  We never spam!

© 2024 Gary L Williams. All Rights Reserved.
United Advisors Group, d/b/a Frontline Wealthcare, is a federally registered investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. Registration as an investment adviser does not imply a certain level of skill or training. The oral and written communications of an adviser provide you with information about which you determine to hire or retain an adviser. United Advisors Group Form ADV Part 2A & CRS can be obtained by visiting: https://adviserinfo.sec.gov and search for our firm name.  Neither the information nor any opinion expressed is to be construed as solicitation to buy or sell a security of personalized investment, tax, or legal advice.

Thanks For Asking

Provide your information and I’ll get back to you quickly.

Your Free Inflation Checklist

Get this valuable resource – a comprehensive checklist of the financial issues that you need to consider when dealing with high inflation.

I hate SPAM and promise to keep your email address safe.

Your Free Job Loss Checklist

Get this valuable resource – a comprehensive checklist of the financial issues that you need to consider surrounding a job loss.

I hate SPAM and promise to keep your email address safe.