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what type of life insurance should I get?

Hello, I want to get a life insurance but have been confused over the last two days over which one i should get. Term whole Universal Traditional variable whole variable universal If there is any other type, please let me know. Please recommend one and why. Im looking into getting 250k up to 500k for 27 year male non-smoker 5'11" 240 pounds. Please if possible provide a company that may sell the one you recommend and pricing. I want something between 80-150 per month.

Public Comments

  1. At 5' 11" and 240 lbs you won't get the 'best' rate so don't look at those. Assuming you have no family health history and no cholesterol issues you might qualify for the 2nd or possibly the 3rd best rate. First of all go for the amount of coverage first. So, don't buy a $250,000 whole life if you need $500,000 of coverage. Keep in mind that each $100,000 of coverage only provides about $4000 a year of income for your beneficiaries. So, a $500,000 policy still only gives them about $20,000 in income (without spending principal and allowing for inflation. Here's a couple option I got from the spreadsheet tool on my site....(all at $500,000) 1) You could do a 30 year term for about $40/month - problem is it only takes you to age 57, so what if you die when you're 58 and still need coverage? 2) You could do a 30 year return of premium term for about $20-$25 more per month which means when you're 57 you'd have a couple of choices. -- You could get a tax-free check back of all of your premiums at ~$24,000 -- If you still need some coverage but a small amount you could take a paid-up policy which would give you in the ball park of $50,000 that you could keep forever without any additional premiums. -- If you needed a larger amount of insurance you could use that $24,000 as a down payment (to get your premiums lower) on a policy that you'd be guaranteed to convert into. This is one of my favorite tools since it's so versatile. Also, in your case that additional $20-$25/month over the straight term policy is the equivalent to earning a 6% guaranteed, tax-free rate of return..which otherwise doesn't exist and outperforms what a whole life policy would likely do over the same time frame. 3) For about $125/month you could get a term policy to take you to age 65, 70 or 75. 4) For around $140/month you could do a universal life policy which would be guaranteed to age 121 not to lapse as long as you paid your premium.
  2. I've been in the financial service business for over 5 years and in my professional opinion, the only life insurance that everyone needs is term life insurance. I have term insurance and so do all my clients. I bought a 20 year term insurance at age 23 with $250,000 coverage with Waiver of Premium and pay about $20/month. If you don't know what Waiver of Premium is, its where in case you become disable for 6 months, the insurance company will pay the rest of your premiums and refund the premiums you paid during the first 6 months you were disabled. If you don't become disabled by age 60, the Waiver of Premium will cancel. I also have been investing $400/month into my Roth IRA in mutual funds. During the 37 years I invest from age 23 to age 60, I am expected to have anywhere between $1.1 million (with average return of 8%) to $3.3 million (with average return of 12%). In the past 30 years, the S&P 500 had an average return of 10.99%. The S&P 500 lists 500 large companies in the United States, many of which you are familiar with such as Coca Cola, 3M, AT&T, Verizon, Costco, Best Buy, Citigroup, Exxon, The Gap, Hewlitt-Packard, and so on. What is a mutual fund? In simple terms, there are a pool of investors such as me who invest their money through a portfolio manager. This portfolio manager will use these investments to buy stocks of different companies to meet the fund's objective. There can be as little as 25 companies or over 100 different companies in a mutual fund. With so many companies or stocks in a mutual fund, a mutual fund is considered to be diversified. Diversification leads to lower risk because your investment is spread over several companies. The great thing about having a mutual fund is that you don't have to worry about which stocks you should buy and when to sell. The portfolio manager takes care of all that for you. Most of my clients also invest their money. Between my clients and myself, I have approximately $1.5 million of assets under management. There is always a risk in investing, but with the education I provide to my clients, all those fears and concerns of the market goes away. Couple years ago, the US economy went into a recession and we are probably still in a recession. I got so many calls from my clients and asking me what to do. I ask them if they need the money right now? They all say no. I ask them do they remember me showing them the long term trend on how the market works? Some say yes and some forgot. Anyway, at the end, they all continue to invest because they realize it would be a bad idea to pull out of the market when value of their shares are so low. They also realize its very smart to invest in times when the economy is doing bad since they can buy more shares when price per share is low. The value of my account was down 26% in the beginning of January 2009. In the beginning of 2010, the value of my account was up 38%. Anyway, besides helping my clients get life insurance and invest their money, I also help them get out of debt. I don't think there's really any companies that is really tackling the debt issue except for one company and thats Primerica. As time goes on, the savings goes up and their debts and other financial obligations goes down. Eventually all their debts are paid off. At this point there are at or just few years away from retiring. With no debt and no kids to take care of and with high abundance of savings put away for retirement, there should be no needs for having life insurance. If there is, they don't need as much as they did when they were much younger. This is why I recommend everyone to get term insurance. Of course there would be people, especially life insurance agents, to tell you to get whole life or universal life and try to trick you on how great these products are. They will say things that it builds savings and it has guarantee interest and you can use it for whatever purpose. So do savings accounts, money market accounts, and CDs at your bank, but the savings in a life insurance policy don't work the same way that banks do. In life insurance, the so-called savings is really called "cash value." If you wanted to take money out from the life insurance policy, you have to put it back and pay loan interest of 8%. If you took money from your bank account, do you have to put it back and pay interest on it? No. But in life insurance, you do. If you die someday, the insurance company pays the death benefit to your beneficiary, but they keep the cash value. So why pay for two things in cash value life insurance (the life insurance and the cash value), and not just the insurance like term insurance, which doesn't build cash value? Is it me or do you find it odd that only life insurance have cash value and all the other types of insurance such as car insurance or homeowner's insurance don't build cash value? So why should life insurance build cash value?
  3. Why do you need the coverage? If you are looking to cover a mortgage or take care of family in case you die, look at term life insurance as it will give you the maximum amount of life insurance at lowest possible price. While your build is on the high side for your height, as long as you get to the right company, you should be able to get some competitive rates with a few companies, provided no other health problems. The following may be helpful to you. http://www.lifeinsuranceadvisors.com/overweight-life-insurance.html
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