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Illinois Insurance Facts
Buying Life Insurance

February 2001
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The goal of life insurance is to provide a measure of financial security for your family after you die. A life insurance policy will help them meet the financial needs that your income would have normally covered. Life insurance can be purchased on an individual or group basis. Most group life insurance is purchased through an employer group and is usually term coverage that is renewed yearly. This Fact Sheet discusses the types of life insurance that are generally purchased by an individual.


Assessing Your Needs

Before purchasing a life insurance policy, you should consider your financial situation and the standard of living you want to maintain for your dependents or survivors. For example, who will be responsible for your funeral costs and final medical bills? Would your family have to relocate? Will there be adequate funds for future or ongoing expenses such as daycare, mortgage payments, or college?

You should reevaluate your life insurance policies annually or whenever you experience a major life event such as marriage, divorce, the birth or adoption of a child, or purchase of a major item such as a house or business. Following are examples of factors you may want to consider at various stages of your life:

Single person with no dependents: Funeral expenses; medical bills; debts, such as credit cards or student loans; elderly parents who may be dependent upon you for support.

Note: Buying life insurance at a young age is cheaper. As you get older or possibly incur a serious health condition, it will be more expensive or difficult to buy a policy.

Single person with dependents: Funeral expenses; medical bills; outstanding debts; caretaker expenses for your surviving dependents; education costs for surviving children.

Couple with no children: Funeral expenses; medical bills; outstanding debts, especially mortgage or car payments.

Couple with children: Funeral expenses; medical bills; outstanding debts, especially mortgage payments; child-rearing expenses; education costs.

Note: Even if one partner does not work outside the home, you may want to consider life insurance to help pay for childcare or other services performed by that partner.

Older couple: Funeral expenses; medical bills; impact on spendable income; outstanding debts, such as a new home, second vacation home, or recreational vehicle; impact on assets you may want to leave for children or grandchildren.


Mandatory Provisions

All types of individual life insurance policies sold in Illinois must contain the following provisions:


Types of Life Insurance Policies

There are two basic types of life insurance policies: term life insurance and whole life insurance (sometimes called permanent life insurance).

Term Life Insurance

Term life insurance is coverage you buy for a specific time period, such as 1, 5, 10, or 20 years, or up to age 60 - 65. Term life insurance has five key features:

  1. It pays benefits only if you die during the time period (term) covered by the policy.

  2. It is generally cheaper than whole life insurance.

  3. It may be more practical for people who need large amounts of coverage for a specific period.

  4. It ends if you stop paying premiums or at the end of the term. However, some policies have a "renewable" provision that allows you to continue coverage when the term expires.

  5. It may have a "convertible" provision which allows you to exchange the term policy for a whole life policy without providing evidence of good health.

Variations of Term Life Policies

The most common types of term life insurance are:

Whole Life Insurance

Whole life insurance is coverage that is meant to be in effect for life. Traditional whole life insurance has four key features:

  1. It provides lifetime coverage.

  2. It allows you to pay premiums at a fixed rate for as long as the policy is in force. (See the section on "Variations of Whole Life Policies" for exceptions to this rule.)

  3. It accumulates cash value over time.

  4. It may pay you dividends if your whole life policy is a "participating policy."

Cash Value

A small portion of the premiums you pay for a whole life insurance policy accumulates as cash value. The cash value is the amount of money that will be refunded to you if you cancel the coverage and surrender the policy to the insurance company. The rest of your premium payments go toward the cost of insurance and the administrative fees associated with maintaining the policy. When a death benefit is paid, the cash value is automatically included in the face amount of the policy and is not paid in addition to it.

Whole life insurance policies contain a table showing the policy's cash value after each policy year. You can use cash value in several ways:

Dividends

Dividends are profits the insurance company shares with its policyholders. Dividend payments are not guaranteed and they may change annually. Dividends are not included in the face amount of the policy. When a death benefit is paid, the dividends or additional paid up insurance purchased with dividends will be added to the face amount of the policy.

You can use dividends in several ways:

Variations of Whole Life Policies

There are several variations of traditional whole life insurance. Among the more common types are:

Whole Life Policies with Investment Features

Since the 1970s and 1980s, newer variations of whole life policies have emerged. Among the types of whole life policies with investment features are:


FOR MORE INFORMATION

Call our Consumer Services Section at (312) 814-2427 or
our Consumer Assistance Hotline toll free at (866) 445-5364
or visit us on our website at www.ins.state.il.us


Related Topics

Replacing Life Insurance Policies or Annuities
Viatical Settlements and Accelerated Death Benefits


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