TERM INSURANCE
Overview
Term insurance is basic life insurance. It is the easiest
type of policy to understand. A life insurance company
will charge a dollar amount, known as the premium, to
provide the beneficiary with a tax-free cash benefit if the
insured dies in that year. A beneficiary might be a spouse,
children, or anyone else the owner wants. If the insured
does not die in that year, no cash benefit is paid. The premium
paid to the insurance company was the cost of the
death benefit protection for that year. The owner does
not get the premium back if the insured does not die.
In order for the insurance company to agree to pay a death
benefit to a beneficiary, the company will want to make
sure that the insured does not have any health problems
that will increase the odds that they would have to pay
the death benefit. Therefore, the insurance company will
probably ask insured to be examined by a doctor. This
process of deciding whether the insurance company will
issue a policy is known as underwriting.
Annual Renewable Term
With a renewable term policy, the insured will need
to visit the doctor to get the first year of insurance.
After the first year, the owner will have the option to
buy another year’s worth of insurance without a second
doctor’s visit. The owner may continue to renew the
policy year after year, as long as he or she agrees to
pay the premium each year. With term insurance the
premium for the same amount of death benefit will
go up each year.
Let us assume that you want a $1,000 death benefit.
If you are 25 years old, the term cost is very low, but
when you are age 100, the annual premium will be the
same as the death benefit, $1,000. The following chart
may help you get an idea of the cost of term insurance.
Level-Premium Term
As stated, each year the owner renews a term policy,
the cost of the policy will go up because the insured
is getting older. Instead of buying term insurance on
a year-to-year basis, the owner can buy a policy with
fixed costs for five or more years at a time. The longest
term is usually 20 or 30 years. These policies are called
level-premium term because the premium stays the
same for the length of the term. The fixed cost in the
early years will be higher than the annual term cost,
but the later years it will cost less than the annual term
cost. The up side is that the owner does not need to
budget for yearly increases in cost, and the total premiums
paid over the term of the policy could be quite a bit
lower than annual renewable term premiums.
For example, your husband is a 25-year-old male. You
have a child and you want her to have $100,000 to go
to college if your husband dies. Let’s also assume that
your child is now 2 years old. It may make sense to
buy a $100,000 20-year term policy, because at 22, your
child may be out of, or close to finishing college.
• 20-year term annual premiums are $150 per year;
total cost $3,000.
• 1-year annual renewable term premiums start at $130
in the first year, but in the 20th year, the annual premium
has risen to $560; total cost $5,800. Often, the owner can renew these longer term policies,
but the new premium will be higher if the policy is kept
longer than the stated number of years.
Group Term
Many times a company will purchase group term policies
for its workers. Group term policies usually provide
a cash payment to the worker’s named beneficiaries if
the worker dies while employed by that company. The
cost for this type of policy is very low, and sometimes
free. The employee may be able to convert the policy
to an individual policy if he or she changes jobs. Talk
with your human resources contact to see if you have a
group term benefit.
Decreasing Term
Many agents no longer sell decreasing term. This
type of term policy is similar to a longer term policy,
but will pay the highest death benefit in the first year.
Each year thereafter, the death benefit will be lower
and lower, until it goes away entirely. Your costs can
vary from year to year, but usually remain level. If
you have bought a home, you may be tempted to buy
this type of policy to cover your family’s mortgage
if you were to die. However, with a regular term
policy, your family will have the difference between
the death benefit and the mortgage balance to use for
other things if they decide to keep the house and pay
off the mortgage.
Convertible-Term
In this overview, we have only looked at term policies.
Another type of policy is known as a permanent
policy. A permanent policy will help you plan your
payments to insure your entire life. In other words,
no matter when you may die, a permanent policy (if
designed correctly) will pay a death benefit. You may
be thinking that you could achieve the same goal by
renewing your term policy. This is true, but the costs
will keep on rising as you get older, to the point where
they may be too high to keep paying. A convertible
term policy will allow you to start with a term policy,
but later, you can convert (or switch) your policy
into a permanent policy. Permanent policies such as
whole-life, universal-life, and variable universal-life
are covered in Life Insurance: Whole-Life Insurance,
Virginia Cooperative Extension publication 354-145;
Life Insurance: Universal-Life Insurance, Virginia
Cooperative Extension publication 354-146; and
Life Insurance: Variable Universal-Life Insurance,
Virginia Cooperative Extension publication 354-147.
If you know you have a lifetime need for insurance, it
makes sense to look at a permanent policy as soon as
possible. However, if you need a policy now, but you
do not have a lot of money to pay premiums, a convertible-term
policy may work for you. In a few years,
if your income is higher, you will be able to afford a
permanent policy and you can convert the term policy
to a permanent policy.
A Final Word on
Term Insurance
Term insurance is good way to protect your beneficiary
for a limited amount of time. Term insurance also
allows for the lowest cost if your need for the policy is
only temporary. If you are a disciplined saver, buying
a term policy and investing the difference between the
cost of the term policy and the cost of a whole-life policy
means your beneficiaries will have both the death benefit
and the value of the investments. In addition, you
will have the investment account to assist you in paying
the higher premiums in the later years of the policy.
Definitions of Terms
Beneficiary – The person or entity receiving the death
benefit at the death of the insured.
Cash Value – The amount of total premiums paid for a
policy minus the costs for insurance in whole-, universal-,
and variable universal-life policies. The cash value
grows tax-free in an insurance policy.
Death Benefit – The total cash payment made to the
beneficiary upon the death of the insured.
Insured – The person on whose life the insurance has
been purchased. If the insured dies, a death benefit will
be paid to the named beneficiary.
Owner – The person or entity who owns the insurance
policy. The owner may or may not be the insured. The owner can designate the beneficiary, and is responsible
for paying premiums. See Life Insurance: The Impact
of Ownership, Virginia Cooperative Extension publication
354-142, for more information on the impact of
ownership.
Premium – The amount billed to the owner of an
insurance policy (usually monthly, quarterly, or annually)
by the insurance company. In term and whole-life
the full premium must be paid to keep the insurance.
In universal- and variable universal-life, the amount
billed may or may not be a mandatory payment to keep
the insurance

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