If you've been researching a life insurance purchase, you know that the better your health, the better your premiums will be. But sometimes a life insurance
customer will be deemed "uninsurable" at any price — whether it's due
to a history of severe health problems, a disease diagnosis or even a
profession that makes the applicant too "risky" to insure.
"Working with an advisor is the best way to
detemine if you’re uninsurable or not," says Jack Dewald, spokesperson
for the Life and Health Insurance Education Foundation. "Don’t give up.
Just because one company says you're uninsurable doesn’t mean you’re
universally uninsurable."
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Are you really uninsurable?
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Even if you have a history of high blood pressure, high cholesterol,
depression or other conditions, an underwritten life insurance policy
isn't out of reach. Many insurance companies are forgiving about some
medical conditions, provided you show that you are keeping your
condition under control.
If you and your insurance agent agree that your health poses a
problem for a life insurance application, the agent can seek options
through an "impaired risk" specialist. These brokers know which
companies are more lenient about specific conditions and may be able to
get quotes that you thought were impossible. For more, read How impaired-risk specialists find life insurance for people with medical problems.
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If you've been relegated to the category of "uninsurable" but have need for life insurance, there are
still ways you can get life insurance without going through the
underwriting process, although each involves its own trade-offs.
Group life insurance allows you to purchase life
insurance no matter what your health condition, up to a certain amount.
Some employers offer a "free" basic life insurance amount (where the
company pays the premium), such as an amount equal to one year's
salary, with the option to purchase more at your own expense. Your
employers group life plan may require evidence of insurability (EOI) if
you want to go over a set amount. However, as long as you remain under
the EOI level, group life is an excellent way for the "uninsurable" to
secure life insurance at group rates.
Remember also to max out the group life you can buy through your spouse's workplace benefits.
The downside: Benefit levels are usually a low multiple of your salary, which may not cover your beneficiaries' needs.
According to JHA's "2007 U.S. Group Life Market
Survey," the average face amount for voluntary group life policies
(meaning those paid for by the employee) in-force in 2007 was $74,109
and the average premium "per life" was $234.
If your group life benefit is low and you work at a
small company, you may be able to get your employer to increase it.
"Sometimes a cooperative employer may bump up a group term life amount
to accomodate someone’s needs for coverage," says Dewald. "A small
business may be able to negotiate with its agent to increase the amount
without evidence of insurability."
Group life insurance usually allows you to convert
your group policy to your own individual permanent policy, without
going through the underwriting process. Your premiums are based on your
age only. This assures you a lifetime of coverage even if you leave
your job.
The downside: You
generally convert policies dollar for dollar, according to Dewald, so
if your group life policy is worth $50,000, that's the maximum
available on the converted policy. In addition, there is usually no
choice of policy types. Nonetheless, notes Dewald, "You know the old
saying: A little bit of something is better than a whole lot of
nothing."
Under a survivorship (also called second-to-die)
policy, a husband and wife are insured together and the benefit is paid
only only after the death of both. This kind of policy is commonly used
by couples who want to provide funds for their heirs to pay sizeable
estate taxes.
The advantage here is that an "uninsurable" spouse
will have no trouble becoming insured under a survivorship life policy
because the insurance company is not underwriting him or her
separately. For example, New York Life Insurance Co. offers
survivorship policies that allow one of the spouses to be "uninsurable"
as long as the other spouse is under age 80 and a qualifies for a
"substandard" rating or better.
The downside: If your spouse needs to receive a benefit as soon as you pass away, this kind of policy won't help.
Phoenix Life Insurance Co. has solved that problem.
It automatically includes a "policy split option rider" on its
survivorship variable universal life policies (called The Phoenix
Edge-SVUL) and a "policy exchange option rider" on its Joint Edge
policies. These riders allow you to split your survivorship life policy
into two separate single-life policies, without further evidence of
insurability and without incurring a surrender charge. New premiums are
based on the ages of the husband and wife. The face amounts of the new
policies can be different but their sum cannot exceed the base value of
the original survivorship life policy.
Here's a rider that can provide free life
insurance coverage to an "uninsurable" spouse. It would be ideal in
situations where a husband and wife can wait for the benefit to be paid
until both are deceased. Here's how it works with an SPPO rider from
New York Life Insurance Co.: Say a husband is "uninsurable" due to
health conditions, but his wife obtains a permanent life policy with a
no-cost SPPO rider. (These riders are automatically included by New
York Life on most of its permanent life policies.)
When the wife passes away, the husband can purchase
a new single-premium paid-up life insurance policy on himself within 90
days. The premium is based solely on his gender and age at the date of
the new policy. The face amount can be equal to or less than the
original policy. The husband could even use part of the benefit for
funeral expenses and put the remainder toward his paid-up policy.
Guaranteed issue policies require no medical exam.
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Guaranteed issue policies require no medical exam.
Anyone (below a certain age) who answers a few medical questions can
buy a policy. Applications will likely ask for your height and weight,
whether or not you're a smoker and basic questions about your health
history. If you answer yes to a question you may be knocked out of
eligibility.
The downside: There's a price to pay for the convenience of guaranteed issue:
- You'll pay far higher premiums than you would if were able to
secure an underwritten policy — so high that you should calculate the
year when you will have paid more in premiums than your beneficiaries
will receive.
- Face amounts tend to be $25,000 and under (in other words, enough to cover a funeral).
- Insurers may impose age requirements (for example, selling only to those age 50 to 85).
- A guaranteed issue policy may not pay out the full benefit
for a few years after you buy it. For example, if you die within a year
after purchase, your beneficiaries may receive only a refund of your
premiums; if you die in the second year, they may receive half of the
policy amount.
Pay close attention to the benefit terms if you're
comparing guaranteed issue policies. Consult your life insurance agent
about your chances for qualifying for an underwritten policy before
buying a guaranteed issue policy. For more, read The basics of guaranteed issue life insurance.
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Preventing "uninsurableness"
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You can take action to prevent your children from becoming "uninsurable" as adults.
"Insurance isn’t all about the right here and the right now," says Dewald. "You can protect for things you don’t know about."
If you're considering buying life insurance on your children, Dewald
suggests looking into a "guaranteed purchase option" (GPO) rider. This
gives the child the right to purchase additional coverage amounts as
they get older, at certain ages, no matter their health. You must add
this rider at the time of purchase.
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Simplified issue policies require that you answer
several health questions, and there's no medical exam. If you make the
cut, you'll likely pay less than you would for a guaranteed issue
policy. It's important to shop around.
Occasionally a professional association (like a bar
association or union plan) will offer guaranteed issue or simplified
issue policies to their members.
The downside:
Guaranteed issue and simplified issue purchased this way will still
come with steep premiums, and life insurance through affinity plans is
not readily available.
Credit life policies are often available when you make a large purchase that is financed.
The downside:
"Generally the worst insurance you can buy," sums up Dewald. "It’s
horribly priced, but if you get to that point. . . ." So, for example,
if you buy a new car and want to be sure your spouse could pay it off
in the event of your death, credit life would fill that need. This
policy covers only the remaining balance on the purchase. For more,
read The basics of credit insurance.
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