Life Insurance

Protection for both you and your loved ones

What is Life Insurance?

Life insurance can be bought for yourself or for someone else, and you can even buy it for employees if you are a company owner. When an insured individual dies, the beneficiary of a life insurance policy receives a sum of money. You can buy a small life insurance policy to enable your family to cover your final expenses or a more comprehensive life insurance policy to enable your family to pay off your mortgage and other debts if you pass away. If you buy life insurance on a business partner, you can use the insurance proceeds to buy your partner's share of the business if your partner dies.  Many people wait until they get married to buy life insurance and certainly it should be a priority once your first child is born.

Types of Life Insurance Coverage

 

Term Insurance

Term insurance is the simplest form of Life Insurance. You generally pay premiums on a monthly or annual basis and your family is protected for that "term". Gordon Tower Insurance offers a variety of term products to fit your needs, time frame, and budget. Term Insurance helps provide for a family's loss of income in the event of your death. It covers short- term debts and needs and provides additional insurance protection during the vitally important child raising years. Term Insurance provides longer term protection to help pay off a mortgage, or can be used to help pay for a college education.

Whole Life Insurance

Whole Life insurance offers same price premiums and life insurance protection for as long as you live. Like any insurance policy, you must ensure premiums are paid as required to keep the policy in force. Gordon Tower Insurance offers whole life policies that can be paid with a single lump sum, premiums payable to 100, or somewhere in between. Whole life policies also provide for the accumulation of cash value on a tax-deferred basis which can be used when you need it, to help with unexpected life’s occurrences. Policy loans do accrue interest, and any outstanding policy loans and interest will reduce the death benefit and cash value. Whole Life Insurance can provide for a family’s loss of income, mortgage costs, and educational needs. You do have access to cash value for special needs. It also allows you to leave a legacy for your next generation.

Universal Life

Universal Life Insurance is the most comprehensive of Life Insurance policies and is very flexible. Your life constantly changes. You get married, you need life insurance. You have kids, you need additional life insurance. Before you know it, your children are all grown up and the mortgage is paid off. Now, maybe you don't need as much coverage as you used to. It's quite clear that your need for life insurance changes as your life evolves. That's why Gordon Tower Insurance offers Universal Life Insurance. This flexible policy allows you to raise or lower your coverage to fit your life insurance needs. Universal Life builds cash value that you can use throughout your lifetime.

Common Coverages

 

Income Replacement

According to a recent survey conducted by LIMRA, a shocking number of American citizens say they do not have life insurance at all, and even more say they do not have adequate coverage. In 2010, LIMRA conducted a survey of American households, and concluded that 30 percent of households in the U.S. - approximately 35 million - do not have life insurance.

Even now that number has remained exactly the same. On top of that, half of insured households claim that they are not adequately insured and need more protection. LIMRA credits a slowly-recovering economy and increasing life insurance rates with the lag in the growth of newly-written policies. However, life insurance is not a luxury - it is a necessity.

Men and women who are the sole providers for their households should realize the benefits of protecting the value of their lives. If a woman is her family's sole provider and passes away, how will they survive without her? If she has life insurance, they will be provided with the means to carry on a similar lifestyle to the one they had before she passed.

Education Costs

Consumers who rely only on the life insurance provided for them by their employer may be stunting themselves, as well. Often, an employer will only provide a policy worth one or two times a person's salary. But what if the policyholder's family then has a mortgage or other debt to pay off? In order to adequately provide for a household, consumers should consider purchasing a term policy from a trusted provider. These policies are often low-cost, and are set for a specific period of time - for example, the 10 years it would take the consumer to pay off his or her mortgage.

Believe it or not, only about 43 % of Americans own individual life insurance - and the average adult has only $45,000 of life insurance. Unfortunately, people think it is ok to rely on work provided life insurance. Relying on the group life insurance provided at your job builds a false sense of security, since coverage is usually insufficient for a family and coverage generally ends when employment terminates. Few people know to protect their own value with life insurance, which leaves their families at huge risk. 

Final Expenses

You see the offers on late night television and in senior magazines: An aging celebrity talks soothingly about cheap life insurance available to older people, veterans or those who dont qualify for standard coverage.

There is no reason to consider this kind of insurance. It is virtually impossible to determine the price, product, contract, caveats and exclusions in such plans without first purchasing the product. Determining what type and amount of life insurance is right for you requires some careful thought. There are over 2,200 life insurance companies in North America - and all insurance companies are not the same, despite what some agents or salespeople may tell you. There are big differences among them, differences that could cost you thousands of dollars in needlessly high premiums or limited coverage. 

Whats more, a number of derivative insurance products are marketed by some aggressive salespeople. These products are usually based on the three major kinds of insurance: term, whole life, and universal. These complex forms are usually designed to fit extremely specialized situations. They often don’t make sense for most consumers.

 

Wealth Transfer

The issue of what a life is worth is one that claimants and insurance companies usually end up fighting over in court. Here are examples: A 28-year old construction worker earning $35,000 per year was training to become an engineer. At a trial, after his accidental death, an economist testified that the economic loss to his family was $1.6 million. The court awarded $2.5 million for economic loss. Also, a 37-year old maintenance worker was earning $160 per week before he died. At trial, an economist testified that the economic loss to his family was $341,591. The appeals court agreed. And A 44-year old truck driver earned $24,000 per year and was attending classes to qualify for a management position before he was killed in an accident. A court awarded $1.22 million for loss of financial support and services to his family. 

The courts consider not just what a person earns today but also what they will earn in the future - accounting for inflation, pensions, retirement benefits, etc. 

So - your life is worth more than you may think. In addition to economic factors, a court may consider personal and family factors - such as: children’s school performance and socialization skills after they experience the death of a parent, the effect on a family of a surviving parent having to work full time, financial stress and/or job pressures that follow from the death of an income-earning parent or spouse, and emotional impacts of grieving and coming to terms with the unexpected loss of a family member. 

 Although money cant replace a family member who has died, courts will often decide that money offsets the impact of the death on a family’s opportunities. The human life value concept was a way of determining what a family would lose in income by the death of the principal wage earner. By this method, if the insured died, the family could be reimbursed for that loss. 

Level premium term solved three problems for insurance companies: Demographics. With baby-boomers entering their thirties in the 1980s, there was a huge increase in demand for life insurance. The size of the policies purchased grew. The typical policy of $100,000 or $250,000 in the 1970s gave way to policies of $500,000 and $1,000,000 in the 1990s. Cash strapped young families. With inflation increasing housing costs during the 1980s, the size of mortgages outpaced income growth. So, the need for family security and income continuation increased while income for most families remained fairly steady. Falling prices. Term insurance rates started falling and continued through the 1990s and early 2000s. The move to cheaper premiums had a chilling effect on the entire insurance market.  

Don’t make your decision based on cheap premiums thus giving up control of options. Select your policy as if this is the last policy you will be able to purchase. This will help you to avoid poor quality companies, gimmicks, loss leader pricing and requiring medical requalification. 

Most people buy term insurance or one of two reasons: They only need coverage for a certain period of time and don’t plan to convert to cash value insurance in the future, or they can afford cash value insurance now but may convert to cash value insurance in the future.

Mortgage Protection

When an insured person dies, it creates an instant estate and benefit the individual’s family. Life insurance provides both peace of mind and financial security for a family. When someone dies, he or she typically leaves behind the unfinished business of a lifetime. This is particularly true of individuals who die earlier than normal life expectancy or die unexpectedly. Costs associated with death include: doctor and hospital bills from a final illness or accident, funeral expenses, estate taxes, and other debts (credit cards, loans, etc.). 

Besides the tragic loss of leaving a family or dependents behind, leaving them destitute adds to the intensity of the loss. The following financial needs immediately become apparent: things like mortgage payments; immediate income needs to pay for groceries, utilities, car payments, and other day-to-day living costs and long-term needs, like money to pay for children’s college tuition, and retirement income for a spouse. 

In the insurance industry, we call the process of calculating a person’s insurance requirements a Needs Analysis. This needs analysis is done by identifying the specific financial objectives of the individual by means of a fact-finding interview. The human life value concept was a way of determining what a family would lose in income by the death of the principal wage earner. By this method, if the insured died, the family could be reimbursed for that loss.

 
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