Life Insurance: What It Is, How It Works, and How To Buy a Policy
What Is Life Insurance?
Life insurance is a contract between an insurance company and a policy owner in which the insurer guarantees to pay a sum of money to one or more named beneficiaries when the insured person dies in exchange for premiums the policyholder pays during their lifetime. The best life insurance companies have good financial strength, a low number of customer complaints, high customer satisfaction, several policy types, available and included riders, and easy applications.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Life insurance is a legally binding contract that promises a death benefit to the policy owner when the insured person dies.
- For a life insurance policy to remain in force, the policyholder must pay a single premium upfront or pay regular premiums over time.
- When the insured person dies, the policy’s named beneficiaries will receive the policy’s face value, or death benefit.
- Term life insurance policies expire after a certain number of years. Permanent life insurance policies remain active until the insured person dies, stops paying premiums, or surrenders the policy.
- A life insurance policy is only as good as the financial strength of the life insurance company that issues it. State guaranty funds may pay claims if the issuer can’t.
Types of Life Insurance
Many different types of life insurance are available to meet all sorts of needs and preferences. Depending on the short- or long-term needs of the person to be insured, the major choice of whether to select temporary or permanent life insurance is important to consider.
Term life insurance
Term life insurance is designed to last a certain number of years, then end. You choose the term when you take out the policy. Common terms are 10, 20, or 30 years. The best term life insurance policies balance affordability with long-term financial strength.1
- Decreasing term life insurance is renewable term life insurance with coverage decreasing over the life of the policy at a predetermined rate.
- Convertible term life insurance allows policyholders to convert a term policy to permanent insurance.
- Renewable term life insurance provides a quote for the year the policy is purchased. Premiums increase annually and are usually the least expensive term insurance in the beginning.
Permanent Life Insurance
Permanent life insurance is more expensive than term, but it stays in force for the insured’s entire life unless the policyholder stops paying the premiums or surrenders the policy. Some policies allow for automatic premium loans when a premium payment is overdue
Posted by waleed azad
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