Colorado Life Insurance
Business Life Insurance
- Funding buy/sell agreements
- Coverage on key employees
- Executive bonus plans (Section
162)
- Non-qualified deferred compensation
- Golden handcuffs
Personal Life Insurance
- Final expenses
- Estate taxes
- Pay off bills
- Fund education expenses
- Replace lost income
- Maintain lifestyle for surviving family
members
Types of Life Insurance
- Level-term insurance (10-, 15-, 20-, or 30-year)
- Universal
life
- Interest-sensitive whole life
- Second-to-die life
- Joint life
- Estate plans
- Burial plans
- Child life insurance plans
Understanding Life Insurance...
The concept of life insurance is really very simple. You
pay a premium to an insurance company for a specified amount
of insurance for a specified period of time. If you
die during that specified time period, your beneficiary receives
a check for the amount stated in that policy. That's
it! Then why has the concept of life insurance become
so complicated?
Studies show that most Americans believe in the value of
life insurance and feel they should own more than they do. On
average, focus group participants estimated their life insurance
needs to be three- to five-times their income, but most had
failed to purchase adequate amounts of coverage. The
two primary reasons cited by consumers for failing to buy
adequate life insurance were that they didn't understand
the products and they didn't trust the insurance industry. In
addition, consumers indicated that they perceive life insurance
to be unaffordable. In general, this was attributable
to a misunderstanding of the various products available.
All life insurance policies agree to pay a certain amount
of money if you die. However, all policies are not the
same. There are two basic types of life insurance: Term
Life Insurance and Permanent Life Insurance.
No matter how fancy the policy title or sales presentation
might be, all life insurance policies fall into one of those
two categories. Also, don't confuse them with Limited
Benefit Accidental Death policies that solicit your business
through credit cards, credit unions, and the like. The
policy exclusions are usually so sever that they rarely -
if ever - pay out any benefits. The premiums are usually
very low for large amounts of perceived coverage,
but they are a pure waste of money for the consumer.
Term Life Insurance
Term insurance is pure death protection for
a "term" of one or more years. Death benefits
will be paid only if you die within that specified term of
years. Term insurance generally provides the largest
immediate death protection for relative to the premium amount. Terms
can be purchased in 1-, 5-, 10-, 15-, 20-, or 30-year increments,
and premiums will generally stay level for the duration of
the term.
Term insurance is usually used to fund temporary
insurance needs and is often utilized by businesses that
want to either fund buy/sell agreements or secure a bank
loan. Individuals also use term life insurance for
needs such as home mortgages or young families.
Certain permanent needs are funded with term
insurance for budget reasons, until such time that the budget
allows the purchase of a permanent policy. There is
a wide range of premiums charged for the exact same coverage,
so it does pay to shop the market. And 'shopping the
market' is what we at GIASM do best.
Permanent Life Insurance
You will find many different names for permanent life insurance
policies. They include whole life, interest-sensitive
whole life, universal life, endowments, first-to-die, second-to-die, and variable
universal life. What they have in common is that
they will all give you death protection for your entire life. Premiums
are usually several times higher than what you would initially
pay for the same amount of term insurance. However,
premiums for permanent policies usually stay level, even
as you age. Ideally, you would fund permanent insurance
needs with a permanent life policy. These needs might include
items such as final expenses, loss of income, or estate liquidation
fees or taxes.
The major difference between term and permanent life insurance
is the cash value component of a permanent life policy. This
also causes more confusion among consumers than any other
aspect of the policy.
Every permanent life insurance policy has a cost of insurance. The
insurance is never free, but sometimes the cost is very well-hidden
from the consumer. Universal life and variable universal
life policies illustrate the cost of insurance and the policy
fees on the annual statements provided to policyholders. A
portion of the annual premiums you pay will go towards the
cost of insurance. It stands to reason that a lower
cost of insurance is beneficial to the consumer by allowing
a greater portion of the premium to go into the cash account.
Most permanent life insurance policies have two death benefit
options: level death benefit and increasing
death benefit. The death benefit is the combination
of the accumulated cash value plus an amount of life insurance. If
the stated death benefit of a life policy is $100,000 and
the accumulated cash value was $15,000, then the actual life
insurance amount would be $85,000. The cost of insurance
would be based on the $85,000, not on the stated death benefit
of $100,000. If a policy has the level death benefit
option and the death benefit is $100,000, then as the cash
value increases the actual amount of life insurance decreases
in order to keep the death benefit level. As the amount
of life insurance decreases, the cost of insurance also decreases. Therefore,
it is beneficial to the consumer that the cash value increase
as fast as possible.
If a policy has an increasing death benefit option, the
amount of life insurance would remain constant and the death
benefit would increase as the cash value of the policy increases. Since
the actual amount of life insurance would remain constant,
the cost of insurance would increase as the policyholder
gets older, therefore eating up more of the premium dollars
and allowing less money to accumulate in the cash account.
Every policy has a policy fee. It is in the consumer's
best interest to know what the policy fee is. The lower
the fee, the better for the consumer.
The cash value is the internal cash account inside a permanent
life insurance policy. The policyholder owns the funds,
can withdraw or borrow the money from the policy, and in
variable universal life policies the consumer can actually
direct the cash value into various sub-accounts that invest
in stocks, bonds, government securities, or money markets. Most
permanent life policies direct the consumer's cash account into
an interest-bearing account. Over the past 10 years,
most of these policies have under-performed their projections,
and actual accumulations have been less than expected for
the consumer. Variable universal life policies are
the exception, having performed as projected, due mainly
to strong returns in the stock market. Permanent life
insurance policies also have some favorable tax treatments
of the cash values when correctly implemented, including
the tax-free withdrawal of funds. In addition, a strong
build-up of the cash value can allow the consumer to stop
paying premiums and just let the earnings in the cash account
to pay for the life insurance mortality charges.
Permanent life insurance policies require that you hold
them for a relatively long period of time before you can
withdraw or borrow from the cash value. Large surrender
charges in the early years of a policy prohibit the consumer
from accessing the cash. The surrender charges diminish
over a period of five to twenty years, depending on the policy. A
shorter surrender period is better for the consumer.
You should not buy a permanent life policy unless you have
the intention of holding it for a long period of time.
Contact us if you would like
more information on this topic or if you would like to discuss
your insurance needs and objectives with one of our brokers.
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Securities offered through GIA Financial Group, LLC (Member
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