“return of Premium” Term Life Insurance Comes of Age

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Category : Insurance

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If you’d like to have term life insurance in place to provide for beneficiaries yet you’re confident you’ll outlive the life insurance policy, you now have many options for “return of premium” (ROP) term life insurance. Under this type of life insurance policy, if no death benefit has been paid by the end of your life insurance term, you receive all your premiums back.

With a traditional term insurance policy, you buy a coverage term, such as 15, 20 or 30 years, and pay a fixed annual price. If you don’t die within that term, your contract ends and you receive nothing, having paid for the “risk” that you might have died.

An ROP term life insurance policy gives you 100 percent of your premium money back (it’s tax-free) at the end of your term if no death benefit has been paid. Or put another way, “You can rent your insurance or you can buy it,” says Alan Lurty, Senior Vice President at ING.

How much will it cost me?

An ROP term life insurance policy will cost more than a comparable traditional term life insurance policy, and there is a significant range among insurers for that surcharge, plus significant ranges depending on your age and the length of term you want.

It will really pay to shop around for the best term life insurance quote, but on the low end you can expect to pay 50 percent more than comparable traditional term life insurance. So, for example, if your annual life insurance rate for traditional term insurance would be $3,000, adding an ROP option could bring it up to $4,500 annually. On the high end, you might be looking at paying 150 percent more over the base premium, so that $3,000 premium would become $7,500.

Shoppers should also note that with a ROP term life insurance policy, generally the longer the term the less you’ll pay out overall in premiums. So a 30-year ROP term policy could actually end up costing less total money, at the end of the term, than a 15-year ROP policy. How does that happen? Because the 30-year term gives the insurer more time to make its money back by investing your premiums. So make sure you price out different term lengths when getting a life insurance quote.

Generally, you will not be returned premiums for extra riders you may add to the ROP term policy.
Who considers it?

The likely customer for ROP term life insurance is a person who has the confidence he’ll outlive his life insurance policy. Or it could be the person who can’t get over the feeling that term life insurance is a “waste of money” if the death benefit isn’t paid out. ROP term life insurance provides a way to hedge your bets no matter what happens.

What if I surrender my ROP policy early?

It’s not wise to buy any life insurance policy if you don’t intend to keep up on payments. However, if you do surrender an ROP term life insurance policy early, you will get some of your premiums back based on a sliding scale if you’ve held it for a few years. Check your life insurance policy details about that sliding scale before you buy.

Many life insurance companies offer no premium returns if you surrender your life insurance policy within the first few years. Your life insurance policy will spell out the rules for surrendering it, such as when partial premium returns would start and the sliding scale for those returns.

For example, just because you’re halfway through your life insurance policy term doesn’t mean you’ll get half your premiums back if you surrender it. The longer you keep it, the higher percentage of premiums you’ll get back, up to 100 percent at the very end of your term. (If you die during your term, your beneficiaries receive the death benefit without any premium return.)

Can I get it for less?

Life insurance companies such as ING and Genworth offer two flavors of ROP term life policies, usually called basic and enhanced (more expensive). Under the “basic” contract, you pay a lower life insurance rate than an enhanced life insurance policy because you get back less if you surrender it early.

For example, if you bought ING’s 15-year term life “basic” ROP life insurance policy and surrendered it in year 10, you would receive 30% of your premiums back. If you held ING’s “enhanced” 15-year life insurance policy for 10 years you’d receive 60 percent back.

For either basic or enhanced life insurance policies you always receive 100 percent of your premiums back if you get to the end of your term.

Invest the difference?

Maybe now you’re thinking that another option would be to take the premium difference between traditional term life insurance and ROP term life insurance and invest the difference. Would you come out ahead at the end? It depends mainly on your term length. Lurty of ING offers this example: Say you’re looking at traditional 30-year term for $1,500 or ROP 30-year term for $2,000 annually. That’s $500 a year you could otherwise put into investments. To equal the money you’d get back from your ROP life insurance policy at the end of 30 years, you would need to see an investment return on the premium difference of about 7 to 8 percent. How well has your portfolio been doing? Lurty says that with ROP term life insurance policies you don’t have to worry about “investing the difference” because it’s being done for you.

Note that the example is for a 30-year term. With shorter-term ROP life insurance policies, like 15 or 20 years, you might indeed yield more at the end of the term by investing the difference. And you would need the self-discipline to actually invest those extra dollars each year.

Of course, should you die within the term, only the death benefit is paid out. Thus, don’t view this as an investment product.

Expect to see more return-of-premium insurance policies as it catches on.

Companies selling return of premium term life insurance:

-American General Life Insurance Co.
-Fidelity Life Association
-Genworth Life & Annuity Insurance Co.
-ING Reliastar Life Insurance Co.
-Lincoln National Life Insurance Co.
-Pruco Life Insurance Co.
-Pruco Life Insurance Co. of New Jersey
-Transamerica Occidental Life Insurance Co.
-The United States Life Insurance Co. in the City of New York

Watch the video related to insurance

This is the 12th Poop I’ve uploaded. Some parts of this turned out to be a bigger pain to produce than I was originally expecting. Also, I accidently put the King sequences in the wrong order… Darn…

Help answer the question about insurance

Can i start insurance on a new car with a new insurance provider before the current policy runs out ?
My current car insurance policy runs out at the end of the month and I will not be renewing with them. I am getting a new car approx 2 weeks before the expiry date. Can i start the insurance with another company and 'overlap' the insurance ?

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Comments (18)

I don't have it and I don't trust it…human insurance is bad enough with all the small print. My dog insurance is Master Card, it's the only "insurance" I'd recommend. It covers everything, literally! Good luck though if you feel you really must purchase insurance!

I have seen many people on here say that you are automatically covered when your parents have full coverage, including insurance agents. This is not true of all companies. Call your insurance carrier and ask. It is a lot easier than finding out after an accident that you are not covered.

Look, Ron Devious is a LEGEND and i wont have a word said against him ! “Nude Lady” ; “500 quid….40 quid….40 quid and a nude lady….dirty books ?!” Lol “It says you fill my mouth in with cement” ; “insurance jargon you know !” Lol

I saw boobs!

Awesome.

Sad how this is pretty much what’s going on in the U.S. with health insurance <__________<

That would be like buying a car with a bad transmission!!! Think about it!!! LOL

hes got to be lying or had lawyer take his tickets to court and won!
tickets are sent to the states motor vechicle division, thats how they find out about your tickets!
TC GL :-)

insurance tips :
http://insurance6.cn

I didn't study for this test (haha)

1-Liability
2-Uninsured motorist if you were a pedestrian
Collision if it's a hit&run in your car
3-Risk & Loss
4-Comp & Collision
5-Driving penalties
6-All of them

That’s what happened to the American housing market.

Reagan warned of obama and his kind, and I'm not referring to his race, He is a socialist, and health care is his door opener.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRdLpem-AAs

Please forward this video to all who question the "acting" president's agenda!!!!!

i really wish private insurance was that honest.

I think you should go to the local building department (city or county) and apply for as built permits for these unpermitted structures. Although costly, it's better than Code Enforcement coming by, realizing that those additions/properties are unpermitted and going to court, seeking an injunction to have you (1) obtain as-built permits or (2) having them torn down.

It is more expensive to have Code Enforcement come in and seek relief from the courts (assuming you don't comply and apply for as built permits) because you may have to pay their attorneys' fees when they win.

I believe you apply for as built permits from the Building Department in the city. Make sure you're in the incorporated portion of the city, otherwise you'll have to go to the County Building Department.

Also, if the bank didn't know that these additions were unpermitted, you wouldn't have an recourse. Most foreclosures are sold as is and requires buyer's diligence. A title insurance policy may or may not disclose unpermitted additions (depends on the wording of the policy). As I recall, a title insurance policy only guarantees that you have marketable title to the property.

What, insurance comes with nude ladies!?

Some group policies at work do not care about preexisting conditions.
Some do. It is usually the private ones, not work connected that
up the rates. Probably something to do with—- if you can work, then
you probably are not too sick, or disabled, so you can be insured.
If it is a dependent child, would you need to take insurance for you
as well as the child, and what is the waiting period.
Work insurance takes a while to go into effect. You may have a rider
or whatever it is called, that will exclude treatment, or make you wait
so long to have insurance, or treatment for the preexisting condition.
I don't know for sure, you could find out some how who the employer
or potential employer uses and check it out on line or by calling the company.

which unlike etna, does pay people.

Never pay policy…interesting…as Social Security

“i hate to see a man cry, so shove off, out the office” ahahahahaha omg that had me in stitches!!!

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