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“Frequently
Asked Questions” |
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Can
I have more than one life insurance policy? |
Yes.
You could have a permanent life insurance policy and add a supplemental
term life policy for a short-term need, for example. If you request
more insurance coverage than your expenses indicate you need, the insurance
company will want proof that a medical condition is not motivating your
request. |
| What happens if I don't make the required premiums? | Typically,
you will have a 30 or 31-day grace period. If you pay within this
time frame, you won't be charged additional interest. If you don't
pay within the grace period, your policy will lapse. With a permanent
policy; however, you can usually draw from the cash value to continue
your premium payments. This will lower the cash value of the policy,
though. |
| What if my policy lapses? | If a policy lapses, most companies allow you a grace period in which to pay your premium and continue the policy. If you have enough cash value built up in your policy, most companies will use part of the cash values to pay the premium due. If you have a term policy and don't pay within the grace period, your policy will lapse and simply end. |
| Do I need life insurance if I'm a young, single person? | An
advantage to buying life insurance now is your premiums will be low.
If you have dependents in the future, you will have locked in the lowest
rates, and you will have guaranteed your "insurability" because
you won't have to take a medical test for life insurance in the future.
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| Are there cases in which I don't have to take a medical exam to buy life insurance? | Group
policies don't require medical exams. Unless you are buying Supplemental
Group Life, or asking for a higher amount than the standard coverage
level for the policy, you don't have to provide medical documents. Most
group life insurance enrollments are held annually through an employer
(usually larger corporations offer group health benefits). |
| What do insurance companies look for in the medical exams? | For individual
life purchases, you will be classified based on height, weight, nicotine
use and other health factors. Your health status will determine what
rate class category you fit in, so even if you have some health problems,
you could be covered. Your agent or insurance company should explain
what criteria determined the class into which you fall. |
| Can I buy a policy on someone else? | Yes,
but only if you have an "insurable interest" in that person.
This usually means a relative, a domestic partner or live-in companion,
or a business partner. There are products such as first-to-die and second-to-die
that allow you to insure the life of another. |
| Can I buy a policy on someone else without them knowing about it? | No,
you cannot take out an insurance policy on someone without his knowledge.
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| Can I name anyone I want as my beneficiary? | While
most people choose only their spouse, it is possible to name more than
one person as a beneficiary — but only if those persons have an
"insurable interest" in your policy. For example, if you have
a $100,000 individual life insurance policy on your own life, you could
name your spouse and four children to share in the policy equally at
$20,000 each. |
| Do life insurance policies ever cancel each other out? If I have a credit life policy and a whole life policy, will one not pay out? | No.
Upon your death (assuming you have paid all the necessary premiums),
the credit life policy will pay out according to the terms of the policy
(paying off your credit card balance, and so on) and the whole life
will pay out according to the terms of its policy (your full death benefit).
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