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Whether you are thinking about purchasing life insurance or researching information on the topic, our frequently asked
questions provide valuable information.
Click any question below to view / hide the answers.
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Thinking About Buying Life Insurance Or An Annuity?
Life Insurance policies and Annuity contracts are sold by life insurance companies.
Both products have been developed to help people meet financial needs at the end of their lives. If you are not sure whether
you need life insurance, or whether you should purchase an annuity, you should read the sections: "Should I Buy Life
Insurance?" and "Should I Buy an Annuity?"
Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Should I buy Life Insurance?
Life Insurance can help protect your family by replacing lost income or providing funds
to pay outstanding bills or taxes in case of your death. Some life insurance policies will also pay you dividends or build
up a sum of money from which you may take a loan.
Your need for life insurance can change over a lifetime. If you
are thinking about life insurance as financial protection for your family in case of your death, here are some scenarios which
show how needs may differ: - Single adults may not need much life insurance, unless they are single parents or support
someone such as an elderly parent.
- Working couples without children or dependent parents may not need much life insurance,
if the surviving spouse is able to make a good income and there are no major debts to pay off.
- Families (including
single parent households) usually need life insurance because young children depend on their income. People with grown children
are less likely to need life insurance. (If you are over 65 and your children are on their own, you might not need as much
life insurance.)
Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Should I Buy an Annuity?
An annuity can give you a regular income paid out over a period of time for retirement
purposes. An annuity may also provide an income for another person, such as a surviving spouse. An annuity is not
a life insurance policy. Some annuities include a death benefit, others do not. Annuities are not savings accounts.
There may be restrictions or substantial charges if you take money out, particularly within the first 7-10 years. Annuities
should not be bought for short-term purposes. The money you can expect to receive in annuity benefit payments equals
the money you have paid in plus the interest which your money has earned. Many annuity sales "pitches"
encourage you to move funds from maturing certificates of deposit into annuities. But these two ways to use your money are
not the same. They have different purposes and time frames. Be sure you invest your money in a way that best suits your needs. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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What are the Benefits of Life Insurance, Annuities, and Variable Annuities?
| Term Life Insurance | Cash Value Life Insurance | Fixed Annuities | Variable Life
Insurance and Variable Life Annuities | | Protection for your family
in event of your death - from time of purchase. | Protection for your family in event
of your death - from time of purchase. | Money saved for your retirement; may include
life insurance. | Various ways to invest your premiums, over which you have some
control. | | No interest or dividends earned. | Taxes on interest and dividends earned are deferred, may be taxed if money is withdrawn. | Taxes on interest earned are deferred, may be taxed if money is withdrawn. | Taxes
on interest earned is deferred, may be taxed if money is withdrawn. | | No
money available to support loans. | Loans taken out of policy normally not taxed. | Loans taken out of policy normally not taxed. | You may
be able to take a loan out against the value of the life insurance policy, or may be able to use value of the annuity as collateral
for loans. | | Short term commitment, but may be difficult or more expensive
to buy insurance in later years. | Long-term commitment required. | Long-term commitment required. | Long-term commitment
required. | | Insurance is for a fixed term. Once the term ends, you must
renew, or lose your insurance. The insurer can choose not to renew your insurance. | You
may lose much of your money in surrender charges if you take the money out. | You
may lose much of your money in surrender charges if you take the money out. | You
may lose much of your money in surrender charges if you take the money out. |
Source:
Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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How Much Life Insurance Do I Need?
There is no precise formula to tell you how much insurance coverage you need. Some consumer
groups recommend five times your gross annual income. Under this formula, a family with an income of $40,000 might need at
least $200,000 worth of life insurance protection (face value of the policy).
Some insurance industry organizations
recommend a policy paying ten times your gross yearly income. With this formula, the family mentioned above would need $400,000
worth of insurance.
Before buying life insurance, assemble your personal financial information and review your
needs. You should consider: - Immediate needs at the time of death, such as final illness expenses, burial costs,
and estate taxes.
- Funds for a readjustment period, to finance a move or to provide time for remaining family members
to find jobs or better-paying jobs.
- Ongoing financial needs such as monthly bills and expenses, outstanding debts,
day-care costs, college tuition, support for elderly parents, and retirement.
You also need to take into account
any assets you have, such as cash; savings; Social Security and pension benefits; other insurance, including mortgage insurance;
and, real estate. Some of these assets will be available for immediate use, some to finance a readjustment period, and others
may help your family meet long-term, continuing needs. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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What Kind of Life Insurance Should I Buy?
Not all life insurance policies are the same. There are four basic types of life insurance:
Term Life Insurance, Whole Life Insurance, Universal Life Insurance, and Variable Life Insurance. Source: Massachusetts
Department of Insurance
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Term Life Insurance
Term Life Insurance policies provide a check to your beneficiary when you die. Term Life
Insurance policies generally are cheaper and easier to understand than other kinds of life insurance policies. Term Life Insurance
usually offers you the best value for your money by giving you the biggest death benefit for your premium dollar. Term Life Insurance covers you for a term of one or more years. It pays a death benefit only if you die in that term. You can renew most Term Life Insurance policies for one or more terms even if your health has changed, although you
may be required to complete a medical questionnaire and might be refused insurance if your health is poor. But each time you
renew the policy for a new term, premiums may be higher because you will be older. If you are thinking of buying Term Life
Insurance, make sure you can afford the premiums for as long as you want to keep the policy. You should ask the company to
show you how you could expect premiums to increase over a 10-year or 20-year period. To avoid yearly increases,
you may want to look for 5, 10, 20, or even 30-year renewable Term Life Insurance policies where the premiums will stay the
same for those periods. These long-term policies may "lock in" premiums for as long as you need a high level of
insurance, e.g., until your mortgage is paid or your children graduate from college. Most Term Life Insurance
policies are convertible. You can exchange your Term Life Insurance policy for a Whole Life or other type of insurance policy
without taking a medical exam or answering any health questions. You may decide to convert your Term Life Insurance policy
if your health declines; it may be difficult for you to qualify for a new Term Life Insurance policy at affordable rates.
Conversion is usually allowed until age 65. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Whole Life Insurance, Universal Life Insurance, and Variable Life Insurance
All of these types of insurance differ from Term Life Insurance in one way: once you have
paid your premiums for a number of years, the policy will have a cash value attached to it. But, if you withdraw all or part
of the cash value, the amount of money you receive usually has substantial surrender charges already taken out of the amount
you will get. The amount you may expect to receive when you terminate the policy is called the cash surrender value. You may
need to pay taxes on the cash surrender value when it is paid out to you. If you buy a cash surrender value policy,
be sure you will be able to keep up premium payments for at least fifteen to twenty years. If you cash the policy in before
that time, the surrender charges and other expenses might leave you little actual cash surrender value remaining. Agent commissions on cash surrender value policies are several times higher than those on Term Life Insurance policies.
Keep this in mind if an agent continues to recommend a Whole Life Insurance policy when you ask about Term Life Insurance.
The insurance company will lend you money against the cash surrender value of your policy, or you may use your
cash surrender value as collateral for a bank loan. If the loan is with the insurance company, you may have the option of
paying the loan interest from any value that is left or future dividends that you earn. But, if there is not enough left in
your account to support at least those payments, you are in danger of losing the policy altogether. Plus, if you die and the
loan has not been repaid, the insurance company will deduct the amount owed plus interest from the money paid to your beneficiary.
In recent years, some consumers were encouraged to make a loan against the cash surrender value or to use dividends
from insurance policies they already owned to buy a new or additional policy. Some consumers found they had taken too much
in loans. They lost the first policy and then couldn't afford the second policy. Even if you are in no danger
of losing one or both policies, these kinds of transactions are not generally in your best interest Source: Massachusetts
Department of Insurance
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Whole Life Insurance
Whole Life Insurance may be called straight life, ordinary life, or permanent insurance.
Whole Life Insurance covers you for as long as you live, as long as you pay the premiums. There is no need to renew Whole
Life policies. In order to buy Whole Life Insurance you will usually have to fill out a health questionnaire,
and you may need to have a medical exam. Depending on the medical information you provide, your premiums may be higher than
the standard rate, or the insurance company may decide not to offer you a life insurance policy. It is important
to be very honest about any medical conditions which could affect your life insurance. Your beneficiaries might receive no
benefit at all if you die within two years of buying the policy and you have not told the truth about a situation or medical
condition which would have caused the company to deny you insurance if they had known the truth. With a Whole
Life Insurance policy, you generally pay the same amount in premiums for as long as you live. This premium is based on your
age and your health at the time of purchase. In some cases, the premium you pay may change over time, but you would be shown
this when you first buy the policy. Be sure you understand what your premium payments will be and that you can afford them
over time. In the early years of the policy, premiums for Whole Life Insurance may be much higher than you would
pay for the same amount of Term Life Insurance. But remember, the premiums in most term policies will rise each time you renew.
Many Whole Life Insurance policies also earn dividends, usually on an annual basis. If you do not take the dividends
out when they are earned, but instead leave them on account with the insurance company, the dividends will also earn interest.
If a company pays dividends, it may pay more or less in dividends than it had been paying when you bought the
policy. The dividends a company will pay depend on many factors, including the performance of their own investments and the
efficiency of their operations. The company's earnings and expenses can fluctuate just like the stock market. When you
are choosing an insurance company that pays dividends, ask for a company's history of projected dividends versus paid
dividends. Remember that dividends are not guaranteed and may differ from those shown in sales illustrations. Sometimes,
dividends may be used to purchase Paid-Up Additions (PUA's) to your policy, an increase to the death benefit. Some companies
will use the dividends on your policy to buy additional Term Life Insurance. But, you might have less insurance than you planned
if the dividends go down and these additions did not supplement your benefits. In recent years, many consumers
were told that dividends their policies earned, and the interest on those dividends might, or would, become large enough to
pay the premium payments. (This is sometimes called "abbreviated payment," or "vanishing premium.") But,
often this didn't happen and those consumers were stuck paying for insurance they couldn't afford. Or, they lost their
insurance plus all the money they had paid in. If you decide to buy a policy which has an abbreviated payment
or vanishing premium option, you should keep close track of your policy's earnings. Changes in interest rates, cost of
insurance, policy expenses and loans can quickly eliminate your policy's ability to pay for itself. Even if you can stop
paying premiums at some point, you might have to start paying again at some later point. Unless the insurance
company guarantees in writing that you will no longer have to pay premiums after a certain time, you should assume you will
have to continue to pay. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Universal Life Insurance
Universal Life Insurance, also referred to as Flexible Premium Universal Life, lets you
vary your premium payments and when you will pay the premiums, with some limits on how flexible you can be. For example, you
may be able to skip a premium payment; or, increase or decrease your premium payments as long as the total amount of premiums
you are paying in over a period of time is enough to keep the policy in force. As you get older, however, the minimum premium
payments may increase. Cash surrender value for a Universal Life Insurance policy depends on the performance of
the insurance company's investments. Make sure you understand whether any benefits or cash surrender values are guaranteed.
Even if there is enough in your account to pay the premiums, continuing to pay premiums yourself means you build up more cash
surrender value. If you do not pay enough in premiums, you may reach the point where your insurance coverage will
end. To prevent that, you may need to raise your premium payments or lower your death benefits. The insurance company must
send you an annual report and will also notify you if you are in danger of losing your policy due to insufficient value. When you buy Universal Life Insurance, you may be able to change the amount of the death benefit (also called the
"face amount"), after you buy the insurance. But, to increase the death benefit, you may need to fill out another
health history or have a new medical exam. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Variable Life Insurance
Variable Life Insurance benefits (both the death benefit and earnings) vary based on the
investment performance of the assets in which your premium payments are invested. You will generally be offered a variety
of investment options (equity, bond, and money market mutual funds). Death benefits and cash values are directly related to
the performance of investment options you choose. There may be a guaranteed minimum death benefit; however, you may be required
to pay extra for that feature. There are two kinds of Variable Life Insurance policies. You can buy a policy which
has premiums with set times and amounts, or you can buy a policy which allows changes in premium payment times and amounts.
Unlike Universal Life Insurance, however, the death benefit will also change depending on how much you pay in and the performance
of the investments you choose. The insurance company will give you a "prospectus" which will explain
the policy before you buy it. The company will probably describe the different investment options in the prospectus, but you
may also ask for additional information about the investment options. Study the prospectus carefully and be sure to ask the
company about anything you don't understand. Agents who sell Variable Life Insurance must have both a Massachusetts
insurance agent license and be registered as representatives of a broker-dealer licensed by the National Association of Securities
Dealers (NASD) and be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as well. The SEC also reviews and approves
the contents of the prospectus you will receive, and is currently involved in an effort to make these prospectuses much more
understandable to consumers. With a Variable Life Insurance policy, there are usually no guarantees. If the investments
you choose lose money, you could find that the value of your account is far less than the amounts you have paid in. Although some Variable Life policies may include a minimum guaranteed death benefit, others do not have this guarantee.
It is possible that, if you were to die when the values were low, the death benefit your beneficiaries received would be reduced
to little or nothing. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Comparing Major Types of Life Insurance
| | Term Life | Whole Life | Universal Life | Variable Life | | Premium | Lower initially. Increases with each renewal. | Higher initially than Term Life Insurance. Normally doesn't increase. | Flexible
premiums. Premiums can rise as you get older or if the company's investments do not do well. | Fixed or flexible premiums. | | Protects for | A
specified period. | Entire life if you keep the policy. | Entire life if you keep the
policy. | Entire life if you keep the policy. | | Policy
benefits | Death benefits only, no cash surrender value. | Death
benefits, possible dividends, and eventually a cash surrender value. | Flexible death benefits
and eventually a cash surrender value. | Death benefits, earnings, and cash surrender values
vary in relation to the performance of the investments you choose. | | Advantages
to Buyer | Lower initial outlay. At first, may be able to buy more insurance for less
cost. | Fixed premium amount. Can take a loan against policy, or surrender policy for
some cash. | More flexibility. Takes advantage of current interest rates. | You can choose to invest your money in stocks, bonds, money market or other accounts. | | Disadvantages to Buyer | Premium increases each time a new term
starts. The insurance company is free to substantially raise premiums if your health changes. | Dividends
can be hurt by low interest rates. You will lose money if you cash it in. Usually no cash surrender value for at least 3-5
years. | Same as Whole Life Insurance and you assume greater risks due to program flexibility. | Same as Whole Life Insurance and you bear all the investment risk. | | Options | May be renewable and/or convertible to a whole life policy. | Partial
cash surrenders may be permitted. | Minimum death benefit. Partial cash surrenders permitted. | May offer a guaranteed minimum death benefit. |
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Source:
Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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How Much Will Life Insurance Cost?
Different insurance companies charge different rates for their life insurance. Comparing
costs can be very difficult. For example, one company might offer a competitively priced policy for 25-year-olds, but not
for 40-year-olds. There are some common factors that insurance companies use to decide how much to charge you for
the kind and amount of insurance you want to buy. These include: - your age and gender;
- your health and health
habits (such as smoking);
- your family health history;
- whether you are engaged in a hazardous occupation,
or have dangerous hobbies (such as auto racing or sky diving).
The insurance company will get this information from
your application, and may ask you to fill out a health questionnaire, or have a medical examination. Once they have the information,
the insurance company will decide if your risk of death is average or greater than normal for your age and gender. If they
believe the risk is greater, they will charge you more than normal. (This is called being rated.) Remember, a different company
may not believe your risk is greater than normal, and may charge you their standard rates. If you are "rated,"
you should be told the reason, such as poor health or a dangerous occupation. If the reasons for the original rating improve,
tell your insurance company and ask them to review the situation. Your premiums might go down. Another major difference
in determining insurance costs will be the insurance company's administrative fees and expenses, including overhead, agent
commissions and other costs of doing business. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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What Other Benefits Are Available in Life Insurance? ("Riders")
At the time you buy a life insurance policy, you may want to buy additional benefits.
These benefits are called riders. If you buy riders, you can expect to pay more than if you bought simply the basic life insurance
policy. Here are some common riders, but you should ask the insurance company what riders are available with the policy you
are thinking of buying. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Accelerated Death Benefits
These are also known as "living benefits". You may receive all or a part of
the benefits of your life insurance policy before you die. Living benefits are paid out for causes such as: terminal illnesses
like AIDS, organ transplant, or permanent confinement to a nursing home. The allowable reasons to receive living benefits
may be different for each company, and you should check before you buy the policy. Any benefit paid to you before you die
will mean that your beneficiaries will get that much less when you die. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Viatical Settlements
A "viatical settlement" is not insurance. It is a contract in which the terminally-ill
owner of life insurance (the "viator") sells the death benefit to a third party in return for immediate cash. This
cash will be a percentage of the expected death benefit. For example, the viatical settlement company buys a life insurance
policy that will pay a $100,000 death benefit, for $80,000.
If you sell your life insurance to a viatical company
in a viatical settlement, that company will pay future premiums and will be the owner and beneficiary of your life insurance.
Once you die, your original beneficiaries will get nothing from that life insurance policy.
The viator may also
contract for a "viatical loan" with a viatical loan company. In this instance, the loan is secured by the value
of the life insurance policy. You will be expected to make regular payments on the loan and continue to pay your life insurance
premiums, but you will retain ownership of the life insurance policy.
The percentage you can expect to receive
from selling your policy, or the amount and terms of the loan may vary widely from one viatical company to another. You
should seek offers from several companies in order to get the best result.
In determining the sales
price or loan amount, the viatical settlement or loan company considers several factors, including the life expectancy of
the person whose life is insured. The shorter the life expectancy, the higher the payment.
Payments generally vary
between 50 to 90 percent of the policy's expected death benefit, but can be even less than 50 percent of the expected
death benefit.
If you are considering a viatical contract you may want to consult with your lawyer, doctor, life
insurance agent or company, and accountant or financial planner. These contracts are very complicated, and may affect other
issues such as Medicaid eligibility. You may not be able to back out of a viatical contract once you have signed it, so you
will need to be very certain of what you want to do before you sign.
Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Accidental Death Benefits
Also known as a "double indemnity", this rider pays an additional amount
if death is accidental. In some cases, policies may pay up to three times the normal death benefit should death occur by a
specific type of travel accident, such as an airplane crash.
Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Automatic Premium Loan
If you do not pay your premiums, the insurance company will automatically make a loan
against your policy to cover the cost of the premiums. This rider can be used only if your life insurance policy has sufficient
cash surrender value.
Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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Guaranteed Insurability
A Guaranteed Insurability Rider would allow you to buy additional life insurance at
specific times without having to answer any questions about your health. However, the cost for the new policy would still
be based on your age at the time you buy it. Source: Massachusetts Department of Insurance
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