My dad is 58 spinal cord injury. Says he has a small life insurance policy $5000. The other one he did have he took loan out against it then didn't pay it back and they dropped him. Anyhow he smokes and is disabled. He has this bad thing on his nose. He told me you better get life insurance on me before they tell me its cancer and its in my medical record. He got life insurance on his mom before she passed of stage 4 ovarian cancer last year. He used some for her funeral and the rest to pay things. Anyhow i was wondering if its just wrong to take life insurance out on my dad - or smart? thoughts?
Thanks!
Good luck and -- Buy the insurance if you find a good deal but be aware that it is amazing how long our old folks can hang on.
After all, you mentioned he has a spinal cord injury, smokes and is disabled.
Plus, if you do not disclose the "bad thing" on his nose it may give the company legal recourse to deny the policy or a future claim because you lied on the application.
As a former life insurance agent, the best thing you could do is look for one of those policies which doesn't require a medical exam. The premium is more expensive, but you are guaranteed coverage.
Or, take Ferris 1's advice and put the premium money into an account that will be used for final expenses.
doesn't he have money for burial and things that he has had? I think if HE CHOSE
to do so..but, You just getting one I don't see that it Benefits HIM at All.
I work in a field where ppl capitalize on alot of it..and its morally wrong when someone is dying. that is where I am saying cannot agree with everyone.
and it should be up to him instead of getting one out on Him.
But now that he no longer has enough insurance to pay final expenses, he seems to be saying, "Hey, you can take out a life insurance policy on me, pay the premiums, and maybe even earn yourself a nice windfall, depending on when I die. I'm not going to ensure there are funds for my final expenses, but you can, and maybe wind up with a profit (or maybe not, of course)"
It may not be "wrong" (if the application is strictly honest) but I find it creepy to pass final expenses on to a daughter, and make it sound like a good gamble.
Speaking as a licensed agent:
We are likely looking at "Final; Expense" plans which are simplified issue
They are of several types:1 Pay Premium& get immediate Death Benefit (DB)
or
2. a Graded policy: Pay premium and get a % in first year, a larger % in second year; and then after one or two years, (Often two) get the full DB.
3. Another Is pay premium, and if Death occurs in 1 or 2 years, get all $$ paid in plus an additional 10%...
All of those beat the return on a CD which is likely under 1%
Now If there is any $$, and it looks like MEDICAID as in Nursing home is coming: A Funeral Trust is in order, as There is no Medicaid look back on that, and the funds can't be attached by creditors: Hospitals, Nursing Home, Dr. Credit cards, someone else lawyer.
And oh by the way it is generally good practice to have policies on those whom you have insurable interests.
But it is a good idea, depending on one's situation.
Insurance companies bet clients will pay into policies long enuf for them to profit enough to make payouts painless to the company.
ALSO, there are scads of rip-off insurers--fly-by-night business that claim to have been around for a hundred years, playing on people's trust. They take your money and run.
That said...
There are numerous levels of insurance.
Like: Whole life, Universal Life,Term, Catastrophic, etc.
WHOLE / Universal LIFE policies build a fund, have fixed monthly cost, require a physical/medical records; is very UNlikely to get contracted for a sick person.
It has to be funded fully [paid into long enough], before it will pay out the value of the policy--if it is not funded fully, the heirs do NOT get the full value of the policy.
If there is enough money in the fund, one can borrow from it, usually at lower rates than usual loans--but this is a trap--hte rates usually jack up--you DO pay interest on those loans, too.
TERM: the monthly fee is paid to the company monthly, the monthly fee goes up faster than with Whole life [or Universal] and does not build any fund one can borrow on, for instance. It will pay out the policy value, even if one has only been paying on it briefly, or, there might be a rule requiring paying into it for a certain number of months/years before one can get paid the value of it.
If you just seek is a policy that pays enuf to afford funerary expenses, those run cheap, and usually have no physical or medical record requirements--though some DO.
So seek those that have no requirements!
These policies usually only go to about $10,000; they are betting you will pay into them long enuf for the company to profit, not lose.
IF you cannot find insurance for end-of-life expenses, you might want to check your State for what there is for "Catastrophic insurance coverage".
I think that only pays on medical bills, though, and not on funeral expenses.
ALWAYS beware of the blitz of insurers willing to sell you cheap policies for funeral expenses.
READ the fine print.
CHECK with the State insurance commissioner to see what they have on their radar for policies for persons in your elder's condition.