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How Vital Is Life Insurance?

Jane Mack

By

Jane Mack

From the Fool blog

Christmas comes early for Centrica investors

Published in Insurance on 16 February 2007

How important is life insurance? Well, do you have a family that depends on you?

The other day I was going over my bank statements and encountered a figure I am very familiar with because I've been looking at it for 20 years. It's for the princely sum of £9.55. Ever since 1986, when my husband and I bought our first house together, we have been paying £9.55 a month to an insurance company to ensure that our ever-decreasing mortgage is paid off should one of us die.

The reason it's so cheap is because one of us has to actually die in order for the other to claim on the insurance policy. It wouldn't cover either of us if we were unable to work through accident or illness so it's a truly bog-standard form of life insurance -- the type that everyone should have if they have anyone in their lives who is financially dependent on them. Unfortunately, around one in 20 adults die while their children are still too young to fend for themselves.

The most basic form of life insurance is level term insurance which means you pay a flat monthly amount for a set period and, if you die during that period, the policy will pay out a pre-agreed amount. For the most part this will suit people who simply want to make sure that their partner and kids aren't suddenly left destitute ie: the mortgage is paid off and there's a pot of money to draw on until they can get back on their feet.

It's not a financial product that you can buy and then forget about either. Even if you already have life insurance, there are key times in your life when your life cover needs reviewing - when you get married, have a new baby or take out a larger mortgage, for example.

However, the provision that you and your partner make for dependants is only 'just in case'. As the years go by, the children grow up and you build up savings, your requirement for life insurance will diminish as they'll either be able to stand on their own two feet or your other half will have your personal wealth to fall back on rather than that of an insurance policy.

If you have no children or you do not have a partner who depends on you, then life insurance isn't something you need to bother with. But if anyone in your family would suffer financially without your income, then you need life insurance. I've said it before and I'll say it again, life cover is only not worth considering when you have no dependants at all.

So if you think you should take out life insurance for the first time, visit The Fool's insurance centre where you'll be able to get a quote that suits your circumstances. There's plenty more information on life insurance in the centre too.

> What You Need To Know About Life Insurance
> Halve The Cost Of Home Insurance

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seanomercy 21 Jul 2008, 8:16am

I took out a life Insurance policy with legal and general which was a reducing one to co-inside with my mortgage. It also covers Myself, and my wife for critical illness. Last year my wife was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. When we looked at the policy, we discovered that She was covered. Not the case, because the Insurance rep failed to tick the YES box to Her having time off work with depression, even though She told him she was off work at the time he asked, and was going back to work the following week. He actually wrote on the form what medication she was taking for it.
I have come close to losing my house several times since with only the one wage coming in.
We are currently dealing with a solicitor to try and resolve the situation, but He says that if we win, we cannot claim anything for the stress that it has caused, or any more for the extra interest we have had to pay on the Mortgage, as I am with the (one account)which is a reducing facility, and the more funds we have in the account, the less interest we pay. I think it's disgusting the way we have been treated. I just hope something can be resolved, or we will end up losing the house. We have only managed to keep it with me working between 60-80 hours a week, but I can't keep it up. I am feeling worn out. I wouldn't mind, but there was an exclusion on the policy to say that my wife couldn't claim for any mental illness, so what difference does it make whether she had time off work with it or not. She's not claiming for Mental health probs. She's claiming for M.S which we were covered for. My blood boils.

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