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Tuesday 22 July 2008

The Rupee Checking Savings Account

The Rupee Checking Account is a savings account opened in India. The money deposited in to the account is converted to Indian Rupees, as per the foreign exchange rate2. You can operate the account like any other, from anywhere in the world. Your family in India can also make transactions, as a mandatee.

The account is for Non-Resident Indians and Indians travelling abroad on work with a valid passport and a valid H1/L1/J1/H1-B visa

The Rupee Checking Account can either be an NRE or NRO account

The Rupee Checking Account can be opened with an initial credit of USD 1000 (equivalent) and you can enjoy a waiver on the minimum balance for the next 10 years. In the absence of a specific offer Rs. 40000 needs to be maintained as minimum balance in the account. This earns you an interest of 3.5% per annum

You can deposit money into the account from anywhere in the world and enjoy privileges such as easy money transfers2 and FREE Demand Draft3 issuance and deliveries at over 700 locations in India

The Rupee Checking Account gives you the flexibility to transact on your account, from anywhere in the world.

You and your joint account holders (if any) will receive
- FREE International ATM / Debit Card
- Checkbook
- Online access to your account

Your mandatee (if any) in India will receive a
- FREE ATM / Debit Card
- Checkbook (if the facility is provided).

Many Needs, One Account
With the Rupee Checking Account, you can not only transfer money to India easily, but also do much more. It is an account that opens up a window to all your financial needs in India so that you can take care of your family from miles away.
With the Rupee Checking Account, you can -
Insure - Buy an Indian insurance policy, or pay the premiums of existing insurance policies. Protect your family and plan their lives
Currently not available for Kenya, US & Canada based customers.
Invest - Tap the potential of the Indian economy. With the Citibank Rupee Checking Account, you can invest in various schemes , such as - Mutual Funds*, Deposits and Real Estate in India
*Investments in India via the Rupee Checking Account is not applicable for customers residing in U.S.A., and Investments in India via Citibank Online is not applicable for customers residing in Canada & Australia.
Avail Home Loans - You can help your family in building their dream home. Avail a Citibank Home Loan, or pay the EMIs of home loans from other financial institutions
Pay Utility Bills - Pay the utility bills of your family in India - such as electricity, telephone and mobile bills, right from where you are
Send Gifts to India - Be part of every occasion that your family celebrates. All you have to do is, visit our Great Offers shopping page to start shopping online with your Citibank Rupee Checking Account Debit Card. Get up to 40% off on various merchandise

Non-Resident External Account (NRE account) can be a current / savings account held in India, in Indian Rupees. The account can be funded primarily by funds from abroad. In an NRE account -
The principal amount and the interest are fully repatriable (can be converted to any foreign currency)
Income from the interest on the amount is non-taxable
The money from the account can be transferred to any other account
The interest earned in the savings account is 3.5% per annum4. The current account is a non- interest bearing account.
Non-Resident Ordinary Account (NRO account) is a current / savings account held in India, in Indian Rupees. An NRO account is best suited for NRIs who have sources of income in India, such as rent, interest gained from any mutual fund, pension, etc.
In an NRO account -
Current Income like rent, dividend, pension can be remitted abroad through the NRO account. Funds which can be repatriated from the NRO are subject to a maximum limit of USD 1 million per financial year.
Income from the interest on this account is liable for Indian Income Taxes
The interest earned in the savings account is 3.5% per annum4. The current account is a non- interest bearing account.


Sunday 20 July 2008

Compare, Select and Save on Health Insurance

iSelect has been established to help you choose a health insurance policy that suits your needs. iSelect.com.au has created one of the fastest growing destinations for consumers to compare, select and purchase a range of health insurance policies from participating health funds. Consumers are increasingly demanding more information prior to committing to a particular product. Working with its participating health funds, together we help provide informed choices for consumers. iSelect is a leading Australian health insurance comparison site (ranked 2nd by Hitwise June 2007). Launched in 2000, iSelect has become a site of choice for shoppers to compare, select and save across a range of great policies. iSelect operates nationally and is based in Melbourne.



iSelect.com.au - Compare Health Insurance Policies

Ten ways to save money on life insurance

Just as there are different life insurance plans to meet your needs, there are different ways to save money on life insurance.

The most important is to shop around. There are hundreds of insurance companies, offering a wide variety of plans and prices. You could save big bucks just by doing some comparison shopping.

Here are 10 more ways you can save money on your next life insurance purchase.

1. Consider term insurance

Some financial planners advocate life insurance policies with cash value components because they force you to save money. Others recommend you buy term insurance for the cheaper premium and then invest the difference.

Term life insurance gives you the most coverage for your buck.

Cash value in life insurance should not be considered a traditional investment, because any withdrawals or loans not repaid will reduce your death benefit. Also, if you take a partial withdrawal from the cash value of your policy in an amount greater than your total premiums, the withdrawal in excess of your total premiums is considered income to you and, therefore, taxable. In addition, every year you own the policy, more of your premium money goes to pay for the cost of insuring you, and less of it goes toward the cash value.

Furthermore, the difference in premiums between term vs. perm life insurance is not just a matter of a few dollars per year. According to the Society of Actuaries, premiums for whole life can be 5 to 10 times higher than the same amount of level term life, depending on the kind of level term being compared. For example, if you're comparing the premiums of 30-year level term it will be a smaller multiple, while premiums on a 10-year term policy could be a larger multiple.

2. Seek out low-load policies

"No-load" or "low-load" life insurance policies have fewer expenses built into them, such as agent commissions and fees, than other life insurance policies. This can mean lower premiums. For variable life insurance, these lower expenses mean a higher percentage of your premium goes to work for you right away, allowing you to build your cash value faster.

No-load policies can be purchased through financial advisors who charge flat fees rather than collecting commissions from insurance companies. Some companies also sell "low-load" policies directly to customers, such as Ameritus and TIAA.

3. Don't buy a guaranteed issue policy if you are healthy or even with some negative medical history

"Guaranteed issue" life insurance policies require no medical exam and are sold to anyone who applies and pays the premium. Since there is no underwriting done, guaranteed issue policies are riskier for the insurer and are, therefore, more expensive than fully underwritten insurance policies. While these policies can be a great way for people who have medical problems to obtain life insurance, if you're healthy — or even if you have some medical problems — you'll get better rates by opting for an underwritten policy, for which you take a medical exam.

The high premiums, combined with a low face amount for the death benefit, can make guaranteed issue life insurance a less desirable option. For some of these policies, you could end up paying more in premiums after only a few years than your beneficiaries might ever receive from the death benefit.

4. Shop online first

While not all online life insurance quoting services will give you the best quote available for term life insurance, they can still be a useful source of information about prices. Just remember, the more personal information you give, the more accurate your online quote will be, but "the lowest quote" should still only be used as a baseline for shopping around.

5. Improve your health

Having health problems can make it hard for you to buy life insurance. High blood pressure, diabetes and heart disease are among the conditions that can make life insurance companies pump up your rate.

Then there are rates for smokers. Smokers may pay significantly greater premiums than non-smokers, and you can't quit the day before you apply. For many companies, the minimum "nicotine-free" period is two years for a non-smoker rate. Some companies will consider you a smoker for as many as five years after your last cigarette.

If you smoke marijuana, pipes or cigars, but not cigarettes, you still must admit to being a smoker on the policy application, although insurers don't generally differentiate between different types of smoke inhalation. (Marijuana users must also disclose drug use.)

Insurance companies use urine tests to check for the presence of nicotine. If you chew tobacco, you might end up paying smoker rates for your life insurance policy.

If you're healthy but somewhat overweight, you will likely be quoted higher rates too.

If you have a pre-existing medical condition that could lead to higher rates, you'll make your underwriters happier and probably get yourself lower life insurance premiums by showing your insurer a history of improving your health, taking your medications regularly and acting responsibly about your health.

6. Don't buy more, or less, than you need

Many experts say the best way to determine the amount of life insurance you should purchase is a needs analysis. It's a basic formula: short-term needs + long-term needs - resources = how much life insurance you need. Michael Snowdon of the College for Financial Planning in Denver says this method is "probably the most accurate approach in what is an inaccurate and imprecise science." Insure.com's Life Insurance Needs Estimator Tool can help.

Experts advise that you do an analysis at least once every three years, or whenever you have a major life change. For example, if you have a new baby, you have to recalculate college education needs and child-care costs. If you own a home, a mortgage is likely your biggest financial burden. Because your mortgage balance decreases with each payment, it's important to include those revised figures in your calculations.

7. If you need more life insurance, consider a rider as opposed to a new policy

Just because your needs change doesn't mean you should run out and buy a new life insurance policy. In many cases, a rider adding extra coverage to an in-force whole life insurance policy can let you expand your coverage without sacrificing your built-up cash value. At the same time, be sure to shop around. If you're still in good health, you might be able to get a better deal by buying a supplemental term life policy to supplement your original one.

8. Buy as soon as the need exists

An advantage to buying life insurance as soon as possible is that your premiums are lower. As you age, life insurance gets more expensive. Many term policies give you the option to renew your coverage at the end of the term without undergoing another medical exam. You also can lock in premiums by asking for a "level premium" policy, which means for a specific time period, say 20 years, your premium rate stays the same. After that term expires, your rates will increase. But if you don't have any dependents, your money will be better spent elsewhere.


9. Check your credit report before you apply

Just as you should check your credit rating before applying for a loan, you should have a look at your credit report before purchasing a life insurance policy.

If there are problems with your credit, you could be denied coverage or be placed in a higher risk class because insurance companies will be concerned you would let the policy lapse due to non-payment of premiums. If this happens in the first couple of years that a life insurance policy is in force, the insurer stands to lose money because of the high up-front commissions they pay to agents.

The total first-year compensation payout on a life insurance policy may be as high as 100 percent, considering agent commissions, supervisory overrides and production bonuses.

10. Pay your insurance bill annually

Once you've found the best insurance policy for your needs, find out if you can save money by the way you're billed. Some insurers charge you less if you pay annually and more if you pay monthly.

In general, the fewer payments you make over the course of the year (known as fractional premiums), the less you'll pay overall. Also, some insurers charge less if they can deduct the premiums directly from your checking account.

Life Insurance Basics

Many of us buy life insurance because we want to make sure that our loved ones, especially dependents, remain financially secure after we die. Income replacement is the No. 1 reason people buy life insurance.

Non-earning caregivers also have an important — and often overlooked — economic value that should be covered by life insurance.

Life insurance is also purchased by those interested in achieving specific business or estate-transfer goals.

There are many types of life insurance policies depending on your goals, and there are huge price differences among different companies offering identical coverage. Policies are available from hundreds of life insurance companies in the United States. Most financial planners recommend that each family income provider carry no less than 10 times their annual income in life insurance, but an even better way to determine your coverage need is to use an online calculator like Insure.com's Life Insurance Needs Estimator Tool

Here's an orderly way to go about shopping for life insurance:

Life insurance is a long-term proposition, so you should pay particular attention, at time of purchase and throughout the life of the policy, to the financial stability ratings of your life insurance company. Ratings indicate a company's ability to pay claims.

Assessing your life insurance needs

The first step in life insurance planning is to analyze your life insurance needs — meaning the economic needs of dependents left behind:

  • Before purchasing a life insurance policy, 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 final medical bills and funeral costs? Would your family have to relocate or otherwise change their standard of living after losing your income? The assumption of immediate death is necessary to determine the current life insurance needs for a family or individual.
  • Add in the longer term financial needs of the remaining family members, such as: children's expenses, income for the surviving spouse, mortgage and other debt payoffs, college education funds and an additional emergency fund.

Because life insurance needs change over time, your life insurance amount should be reevaluated periodically. We recommend a review at least once every five years or whenever you experience a major life event such as a change in income or assets, marriage, divorce, the birth or adoption of a child, or a major purchase such as a house or business.

In theory, you should have a declining need for life insurance as you age because fewer people remain dependent upon you for income support. Exceptions would be protecting a business entity or paying taxes on a large estate for heirs. If the purpose of buying life insurance is to pay estate taxes, then you’ll need permanent life insurance, which is in-force as long as you live and pay premiums.

Policy choices

Life insurance policies are divided into two main types:

  • Term life insurance, which provides only death protection without any side funds or “cash values” (offering the least expensive cost per $1,000 of death coverage purchased).
  • Permanent life insurance, which has “cash value” accounts in which a return-on-investment component becomes an often complex and expensive part of the policy (most expensive cost per $1,000 of coverage).

Term life insurance

The simplest of all life insurance to understand and the cheapest to buy: Term life insurance provides death benefit protection without any savings, investment or “cash value” components for the term of the coverage period.

Term life insurance is available for set periods of time such as 10, 15, 25 or 30 years। With "annual renewable term life," your policy automatically renews each year and premiums increase as you get older. Choose "level term insurance" if you want your premium to stay the same for the duration of the policy. Also available is "decreasing term insurance," where premiums remain level but your death benefit declines over time. This is good if you want to cover only a specific debt that decreases, such as a mortgage or business loan.

As long as you pay your premiums, the company cannot cancel you.

Term life insurance is a popular choice because of the long rate-guarantee periods and because premiums are at all-time lows. However, if you get to the end of your policy term and still need life insurance, you'll need to shop for a new policy, which will then be priced based on your older age and health status.

Choosing an initial rate-guarantee period is easy: Match the period of time your dependents need your income to the available rate-guarantee periods. For example, if your children are young and you have decades to go on your mortgage, try 30-year term life. If your children are leaving the nest and your home is paid off or nearly paid off, 10-year term might fit the bill.

Other policy provisions that drive the popularity of term life insurance are guaranteed renewal and guaranteed convertibility.

  • Guaranteed Renewal. Before you buy a term life policy, ask the agent or company to confirm to you that the policy contains a guaranteed renewable option, which grants you the right to continue coverage beyond the initial rate-guarantee period without a medical exam. This feature, found in most term life policies sold today, is extremely important should you become sick and uninsurable toward the end of your rate-guarantee period.

    For example, say that you’ve been paying $800 per year on a $500,000, 20-year level term life policy and develop cancer near the end of the 20-year period, thus making you uninsurable. Assuming that you want to continue the coverage, a guaranteed renewable clause would allow you to continue the coverage beyond 20 years on an annual renewable basis without an exam, albeit at a much higher annual premium of, say, $8,000 in year 21, $11,000 in year 22, and so on.

    You may have sticker shock right now but these premiums don’t look so high when you are very sick and uninsurable but still in need of coverage.

  • Guaranteed Convertible. Another built-in feature of most term life policies is the right to convert your coverage to any cash value policy that the company might offer at current rates without having to take another physical exam. This feature may be the future if you decide you want cash value life insurance.

If you'd like term insurance to cover you for a certain period of time but you're confident you'll outlive the policy, consider a "return of premium" (ROP) term life insurance policy. Under this type of policy, if no death benefit has been paid by the end of your insurance term, you receive all your premiums back (tax-free). Return of premium term life insurance generally costs 50 to 150 percent more than a comparable term policy but it provides a way to hedge your bets no matter what happens.

For more, read "Return of premium" term life insurance comes of age.

Term life insurance is widely available on the Internet, from direct-to-consumer life insurance companies and from insurance agents and brokers.

For more, read The basics of term life insurance.

Cash value life insurance

If you want more than a death benefit from your life insurance policy and like the idea of a long-term savings account (not insured by any federal agency) or stock market investment, you might consider cash value life insurance such as whole life, universal life or variable life। But be prepared to pay much higher premiums per $1,000 of coverage precisely because you are now funding a cash value account and paying fees and expenses.

In many cash value policies, the annual premium does not increase from year to year. Universal life policies allow you to fluctuate or even skip premium payments, which in turn adjusts your death benefit amounts.

Unlike term life insurance, which is easily compared online, cash value insurance is often marketed by agents and brokers in a face-to-face setting, where needs and strategies can be discussed.

Because of the complexity and dizzying array of possible outcomes for permanent life insurance, regulators insist that cash value insurance be sold using pre-approved illustration formats. These illustrations can run to 15 or more pages. Cash value life insurance illustrations are divided into two major sections: guaranteed values and projected or “illustrated, non-guaranteed” amounts. Illustrations can be complex and hard to compare in an apples-to-apples way.

Pay particular attention to the guaranteed death benefit and premium-payment sections because these columns contain the actual company promises. If you don’t like what you see there, walk away.

Another caveat: Many cash value policies contain harsh penalties for surrendering the policies in the early years. Changing your mind within the first few years is an expensive decision.

For more on cash value and an example of a policy illustration, see Cash value in life insurance: What's it worth to you?.

Whole life

Ordinary whole life insurance offers “permanent protection” with a cash value account that grows over time। Whole life provides a level death benefit and level premiums throughout your life and for as long as you continue to pay the premiums। For example, a healthy 40 year-old female might pay $4,200 per year for a $500,000 whole life policy. The premium remains level at $4,200 per year for the rest of her life and, in the event of death at any age, the policy will pay $500,000 to her beneficiary.

Whole life also contains a cash value account that builds over time, slowly at first and gaining steam after several years. You can withdraw your cash value or take out a loan against it, but remember, if you die before you pay back the loan, the death benefit paid to your beneficiaries will be reduced. For example: Susan has a $500,000 whole life policy in force and, over the years, has borrowed continually from the cash value. Her total loan amount and accrued interest totals $300,000. When Susan dies, her beneficiary will receive $200,000 because the life insurance company will first pay itself back from the death benefit.

Understand what your beneficiaries will receive upon your death. If you have a traditional whole life policy, your beneficiaries receive only the death benefit no matter how much cash value you've built up. Other payout options available for higher premiums are:

  • Death benefit plus cash value
  • Death benefit plus return of premium

Whole life policies can be issued as "participating" or "nonparticipating." Participating policies typically cost more but may return annual dividends if the insurer has a good financial year. Dividends are never guaranteed. Nonparticipating whole life insurance offers no dividends.

Buyers of whole life insurance like the certainty of fixed premiums with a known death benefit for life. They also appreciate the "forced savings" component and watching their cash value account build up.

Universal life

This kind of policy offers greater flexibility than whole or term life. Universal life has many moving parts to understand before you buy.

After your initial premium payment, you can reduce or increase the amount of your death benefit. Also, after your initial payment, you can pay premiums any time and in any amount, as long as you don’t miss a minimum payment level. In some cases, there are limits to how much extra you can pay in advance. If you choose to increase your death benefit, you may have to provide medical proof that your health has not deteriorated.

You will need to manage these policies to maintain sufficient funding, especially because the insurance company can increase charges.

Some new universal life policies perform like term life insurance: They can be configured at the time of purchase to provide both level death benefits and level premiums that are guaranteed for life as long as you pay the scheduled premium.

Variable life

Variable life offers a death benefit with a side fund that operates like an investment account. It shifts the uncertainties of investment gains and losses to the policyholder.

The insurance company invests your premiums and offers you a choice of funds in which your money will be invested. Returns are not guaranteed. The amount of money your beneficiaries will receive and the cash value of your policy depend on how well the underlying accounts perform. Theoretically, the cash value can go down to zero and, if so, the policy will terminate. Some variable life policies will guarantee a minimum death benefit.

Other permanent life considerations

When your cash value account grows large enough, it can be used by the insurer to pay your premiums for the rest of your life. This is known as being "paid up." You can still withdraw your cash value, but you'll have to resume premium payments to keep the policy in force or settle for a reduced benefit that the remaining cash value can support. Your policy illustration will show you how long it may take for your whole life policy to be "paid up."

If you no longer want your whole life policy, you can surrender it to receive the current cash surrender value or convert it into an annuity, but keep in mind that cashing in a permanent policy after only a couple of years is an expensive way to get insurance protection for a short time.

For more on permanent life insurance, see The basics of whole life insurance

Riders add benefits

You can add riders to your life insurance policy that guard against a number of unpleasant situations. Your insurer will have its own list of available riders, but here are a few:

  • Accelerated death benefit rider (aka living benefits rider): Pays the benefit early if you become terminally ill.
  • Accidental death benefit rider: Pays an extra benefit if you die as the result of an accident.
  • Long term care rider: Pays for long term care expenses should you not be able to do some of the "activities of daily living," such as dressing or toileting.
  • Waiver of premium rider: Waives premium payments should you become totally disabled.

How life insurance is priced

Life insurance is priced based on your life expectancy, the face amount you request and the length of the policy, whether it's the duration of your life (whole life) or a specific period (term life).

Because your current and past health conditions impact your life expectancy, insurers want to know as much as possible about your health condition. Common conditions such as high blood pressure, heart disease, obesity, cancer and depression can all raise your premiums or even result in a declination.

Based on your medical history, you'll be grouped into a category such as "preferred plus," "preferred," "standard" and "substandard." Your category ultimately determines your premiums. For more, read How life insurance companies view you: Underwriting categories.

Insurance buyers with severe health conditions or a combination of conditions can find it hard or impossible to find life insurance. They are known as "impaired risks." Local agents may not be experienced enough to find a company that specializes in insuring people with certain medical conditions. Fortunately, impaired-risk specialists have expertise in knowing where to direct applications for folks with medical conditions. For more, read How impaired-risk specialists find life insurance for people with medical problems.

The life insurance buying process

The life insurance applications process is paper-intensive, can take weeks and often seems intrusive for people who value their privacy. A face-to-face paramedical examination is generally required for policies in excess of $100,000, which means, at minimum, giving of both blood and urine samples to the paramedical professional.

Expect questions in detail regarding your lifestyle, intended foreign travel destinations, your family health history and your personal health history। Do you intend to scuba dive? Have you had parents or siblings with heart disease or cancer before age 60? Have you ever taken any medicine for anxiety or depression? These, and more, are the kinds of questions to expect.

Sometimes multiple interviews are required in order to verify your information. The paramed examiner typically asks these questions face-to-face and often insurance companies will conduct follow-up telephone interviews so that you can verify the first set of answers. Regardless of the type of life insurance you buy, most policies require you to meet certain guidelines regarding your lifestyle and health history.

For more, read The lowdown on life insurance medical exams.

If it sounds tempting to shortcut this process by fudging on an answer or withholding information, don’t do it. It’s a crime in all 50 states to lie about or conceal information on a life insurance application. Besides, policies obtain through fraud can be voided at claim time.

Insurers will likely report your medical exam results (reported as numbered codes) to the Medical Information Bureau (MIB), which maintains a database of those who have applied for life insurance in the last seven years. If you've given different answers to medical questions in the past, it will raise a red flag with the MIB. The goal of the MIB database is to reduce fraud.

All standard life insurance policies generally cover death by any cause at any time in any place, except for death by suicide within the first two policy years (one year in some states).

If you know don't care to go through the underwriting process, you have two other, more expensive, options:

  • Simplified issue life insurance can be purchased after answering only a few medical questions. There is no medical exam required. However, if you report health problems, you will likely be declined. Also, if you are healthy, or even if you have some negative medical history, an underwritten policy is still going to be your least expensive.
  • Guaranteed issue life insurance is sold to anyone who applies (up to an age limit) and is by far the most expensive way to purchase life insurance. This should be considered only by those who are declined for everything else but still need life insurance. These policies have graded death benefits, meaning your beneficiaries won't receive the full death benefit until several years into the policy.

In naming a beneficiary, keep in mind that the life insurance company will want to see only the names of those who are financially dependent upon you. An acquaintance, friend or relative, absent of a financial relationship, will not do.

Working with an agent

After reviewing the various life insurance policies available, you might still be unsure about which best meets your needs. The American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI) recommends consulting an insurance agent. ACLI spokesman Jack Dolan says an agent can recommend policies that will meet your needs. “Look at the recommended policy with care to be sure it fits your personal goals.

Carefully study your agent's recommendations and ask for a point-by-point explanation. Make sure the agent explains items you don't understand. Because your policy is a legal document, it is important that you know what it provides.

Insure.com offers these recommendations for deciding which type of life insurance to purchase:

If your agent recommends a term life policy, ask:

  • What is the Standard & Poor's, A.M. Best, Fitch, Moody’s and Weiss ratings of this insurance company?
  • What is the initial rate-guarantee period? Is this policy renewable past the initial rate-guarantee period without a physical exam? If so, what are the premiums?
  • Is this policy convertible to permanent insurance without a physical exam? If so, for what period of time do I have the right to convert?

If your agent recommends a cash value policy, ask:

  • What is the Standard & Poor's, A.M. Best, Fitch, Moody’s and Weiss ratings of this insurance company?
  • Can you tell me, in writing, why you are recommending cash value insurance for me at this time?
  • Why should I combine my life insurance protection needs with my investment objectives?
  • Can you please prepare an analysis for me that shows the true cost of this cash value insurance policy over 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 years vs. buying term life and investing the difference in long term bonds over those same time periods?
  • How much is your first-year commission on this proposed cash value policy vs. your commission on an equivalent term life insurance policy?
  • Are these proposed annual premiums within my budget?
  • Why do you think that I can commit to paying these premiums over the long term, perhaps decades?
  • How much will I receive if I surrender the policy?

A Term Life Insurance

Term life insurance is the simplest type of life insurance. It is usually meant to be temporary, covering the insured for a fixed amount of time, with premiums that often increase as the insured ages. Like any other type of life insurance, term life insurance represents a legal contract between the owner of the policy and the insurance company, and like any type of contract, it has a language of its own. Knowing the definitions of common terms can help you understand exactly what you’re paying for when you buy term life insurance.


Annual renewable term life Term life insurance that is renewable each year for a fixed period of time, usually 5, 10, 15, 20 or 30 years. The annual premium increases each year, based on the chances of the benefit being paid. In the earliest years, the premium is usually very affordable, but by the end of the term, it may become financially unviable.

Beneficiary The person or persons who will be paid if the person insured by the life insurance policy dies

Cash value The amount of money that is available on the life insurance policy for loans or withdrawals. Term life insurance has no cash value, since it only pays off if the insured dies (or under other conditions named in the insurance policy)

Convertible term insurance Term insurance that can be converted to whole life insurance by the owner of the policy without providing evidence of insurability

Dividend A cash payment that is a return on part of the premiums paid by the owner of the policy based on a number of variables. Term life insurance does not pay dividends.

Face Value The amount of the death benefit that will be paid, not including additional amounts that will be payable in the case of accidental death, or under special provisions

Insurability Acceptability of the insured person to the insurance company. In term life insurance, insurability is often not an issue, and proving insurability may not be necessary when converting term life insurance to whole life insurance.

Insured The person in whose name the policy is issued. The insured may or may not be the owner of the policy. If the insured dies, term life insurance pays a benefit to the beneficiary/ies

Insurer The insurance company

Level Term Life Insurance A version of term life insurance where the premium is guaranteed to remain the same for a certain period of time – often 10, 15, 20 or 30 years. The longer the level term, the more expensive the premiums are, since the older years are averaged into the overall premium.

Policy owner The person who pays the premiums on the insurance policy

Premiums Payments made to the life insurance company to keep a policy in force

Renewable Term Life Insurance that is in force for a stated period, and can be renewed by the policy holder (or owner) at the end of each term for a limited number of terms without proving insurability of the insured

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