What is Life
Insurance?
Life insurance helps to
ensure that your family and loved ones are protected against
financial difficulties in the event of a premature death. In general, it is an essential component in
planning for the future. 
Combined with investments, retirement and estate planning, life insurance is a fundamental part of a sound financial plan. With the help of an HSH insurance professional you can develop a complete plan that will protect you and your family. This section gives you basic information about various types of life insurance, how to conduct a needs analysis, and the basics of estate planning. Life insurance is the foundation of a sound financial plan. It provides financial security for your family by protecting your financial resources, such as your present and future income, against the uncertainties of life.
More specifically, life insurance provides cash to your family after your death. This cash (the death benefit) replaces the income you would have provided and can meet many important financial needs: It can help pay the mortgage, run the household, send your kids to college, and ensure that your dependents are not burdened with debt. The proceeds from a life insurance policy could mean that your family won't have to sell assets to pay outstanding bills or taxes. What's more, there is no federal income tax on life insurance benefits. To evaluate your future financial contributions to your family, use the Life Insurance Needs Calculator on this site.
Most
people with dependents need life insurance. While there's no
substitute for evaluating your specific situation, one rule of
thumb is to buy life insurance equivalent to five to ten times
your annual gross income. To determine how much, if any, life
insurance you need, start by gathering all your personal financial
information and estimating what your family will need after you're
gone. Include ongoing expenses (such as day care, tuition, or
retirement) and immediate expenses at the time of death (like
medical bills, burial costs, and estate taxes). Your family also
may need funds to help them readjust: perhaps to finance a move,
or pay expenses while job hunting. Use the Life Insurance Needs
Calculator on this site to help you begin evaluating your needs.
The best way to evaluate your specific needs is to contact a HSH
life insurance professional. Choosing a life insurance product is
an important decision, but it can be complicated. As with any
major purchase, it is important that you understand your family's
needs and the options open to you.
There are many options with coverage, depending on your situation.
And there are three main categories of life insurance: term life,
universal life, and whole life insurance.
Term life
insurance is the simplest and least expensive type of policy. It's
pure insurance with no cash value account. A term life policy has
only one function: to pay a specific lump sum to whoever you've
designated, upon a specific event - - your death. The death
benefit and the policy limit are the same - - a $200,000 policy
pays a $200,000 death benefit. The policy protects your family by
providing money they can invest to replace your salary, as well as
to cover final expenses incurred by your death.
Whole life
insurance provides permanent protection for your dependents while
building a cash value account. With this type of insurance, the
insurance company manages the policies various accounts. Whole
life insurance provides permanent protection for your dependents
while building a cash value account. With this type of insurance,
the insurance company manages the policies various accounts.
What it does:
It pays a death benefit to the beneficiary you name and offers you
a low risk cash value account and tax-deferred cash accumulation.
It provides a fixed premium which can't increase during your
lifetime as long as you continue to pay the planned amount.
It allows the insurance company to exclusively manage the cash
value account in your policy.
It provides you the option to receive dividends from your policy
or apply them to reduce payments.
It offers you the right to withdraw from the policy during your
lifetime.
What it doesn't do:
It doesn't offer the account flexibility to invest in separate
accounts such as money market, stock, and bond funds.
It doesn't allow you the account flexibility to split your money
among different accounts or to move your money between accounts.
It doesn't offer premium flexibility.
Universal life
insurance provides permanent protection for your dependents and is
more flexible than whole or variable life. Universal life
insurance provides permanent protection for your dependents and is
more flexible than whole or variable life.
What it does:
It pays a death benefit to the beneficiary you name and offers you
a low risk cash value account and tax deferred accumulation.
It allows you to earn market rates of interest on your cash value
account.
It offers the right to borrow or withdraw from the policy during
your lifetime.
It allows you premium flexibility.
It offers face amount flexibility.
What it doesn't do:
It doesn't offer you the account flexibility to invest in separate
accounts such as money market, stock, and bond funds.
Do you need Life Insurance?
It depends on your situation. Several key
questions follow below to help give you an idea of signals
pointing to “yes”.
1. Are you married?
2. Own a business?
3. Dependent children?
4. Other dependent relatives? (seniors, disabled)
5. You possess a formidable estate
6. Currently have major financial obligations? (mortgage, multiple
loans)
A good life insurance policy would handle the financial
responsibilities you left behind so family members wouldn't be
burdened. Unlike the funds from an estate, the benefits from a
life insurance policy will shoot straight to the beneficiaries,
without any roadblocks.
Which Type of Life Insurance is Best for
You?
There are two basic types of life insurance: term and permanent.
Term insurance is purely life insurance while permanent (aka "cash
value" or "whole life") policies include a savings element.
You've probably heard lots of sales pitches and marketing hype
regarding cash value polices, and other arguments about how term
policies are the better deal. The truth of the matter depends on
each persons individual situation.
Benefits of a Term Life Policy
1. It's straightforward. If you die
during the term of your policy your beneficiaries get paid -that's
all there is to it.
2.
It's inexpensive. You aren't paying anything
extra to fund a savings account or cover investment fees. And
because the market is so competitive for term insurance, companies
have a huge incentive to keep prices low.
3. It's easy to shop for. With
relatively little effort you can comparison shop and assure
yourself of a good deal.
4. You pay only for what you need when
you need it. You typically need life insurance coverage for a
specific period of time (until the kids are out of college, for
instance).
Benefits of a Permanent Life
Insurance Policy
1. Flexibility. A permanent
plan can give you access to some or all of the premiums that you
have been paying for in a way favorable to your taxes.
2. It's with you until you die. This type of policy
coverage is guaranteed for your life with no out of the blue
payment increases. A term policy will expire at a certain date,
and a renewed policy could have much higher premiums.
3. Inheritance. Maybe the best reason for a permanent
policy is to make sure your estate and investments don't get
eaten up by the government. A permanent policy can provide peace
of mind that your family and loved ones will be taken care of for
the future.
Remember, the decision to buy a permanent or a term life insurance
policy will depend on your situation, your age, your financial
well-being, and other factors. If you are a young family with some
investments to protect but not financially stable a term life
policy might be a good idea to protect those investments and your
family. However, if you are financially stable with considerable
investments, it may be a better decision in the long run to
purchase a permanent plan.