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Suze Orman Money Matters

Suze Orman, Money Matters

Why It Pays to Review Your Life Insurance

by Suze Orman

Very Good (43 Ratings)
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Posted on Thursday, June 29, 2006, 12:00AM
Besides the computer you're using right now, name a big-ticket item that costs a lot less now than it did 10 years ago, and delivers a lot more for the money.

Not easy, is it?

Well, I have one for you: life insurance. Protecting your loved ones with a term life insurance policy costs one-third less than it did just a decade ago.

That makes life insurance a great deal for anyone who needs to purchase a new policy, but folks who already have a policy can save, too, if they ditch their old, expensive policy and take out a new one. Of course, that only makes sense if the insured is still in good health. And remember: Never cancel an old policy until you have been approved for a new policy, have paid your first premium, and the new policy is active.

How to Save a Bundle on Your Life

Let's say that 10 years ago a healthy 30-year-old guy bought a 20-year level term insurance policy with a $500,000 death benefit. Translation: He bought insurance for 20 years and agreed to pay an annual premium that would not rise in that time. If he dies during the 20-year period, his beneficiaries get a $500,000 payout. If he's still alive after 20 years, the policy expires with no payout to anyone.

This policy has an annual premium of $455 a year, according to the folks at AccuQuote, an online life insurance firm. But if the same fellow, now 40 and still in good health, wanted to save a bundle, he could take out a new 10-year, $500,000 level term policy and pay just $295 a year. That's a 35 percent saving!

Or, if he decides to extend the duration of his insurance, he could add an extra 10 years to his current coverage. So instead of taking out a new 10-year policy, he would go for a new 20-year policy. The cost: $470 a year. He just bought an extra 10 years of coverage for only $15 more a year than he paid on the policy he bought in 1996.

The Whole Story

The cheap cost of term life insurance is further evidence that permanent life insurance -- also called cash value insurance -- is in most cases a supreme waste of money.

Insurance agents love to sell cash value policies because they cost a lot more, and agents are compensated by a commission on what they sell. According to AccuQuote, a 30-year-old buying a $500,000 whole life insurance policy -- a popular type of permanent insurance -- would pay a $4,505 annual premium. The same 30-year-old who buys a 20-year level term policy today will pay just $355 a year.

Here's what the agent selling the permanent policy isn't saying: You rarely need insurance forever. Life insurance is only needed to provide protection in the early stages of your life, when you have yet to build up other assets. It's only in rare cases -- if you have a disabled child who may survive you, say, or a very large estate that requires some tax planning -- that a permanent policy might make sense. For the vast majority of us, term insurance is the only logical choice.

It's true that a permanent policy is good forever -- as long as you keep paying the premiums, your policy will remain in force. With a term policy, your coverage stops after the end of the term. And, yes, it's also true that there's an investment component to permanent policies. But as you'll see, it's not a good deal.

The Best Deal

The difference between the $355 premium you as a healthy 30-year-old would pay today for a $500,000 term policy, and the $4,505 you would pay for a whole life policy, is $4,150 a year. If you opted for the term policy and invested the $4,150 you "saved" by not going for the whole life policy, and earned an average of 8 percent a year, you would have about $202,000 after 20 years.

That $202,000 is a nice bit of savings to protect your family after your insurance runs out. Moreover, it exceeds the value of the permanent policy; after 20 years, the cash value of the whole life policy is $110,200. So you would make nearly $100,000 more by investing on your own. Even better, if you leave the $202,000 to grow at an average rate of 8 percent a year -- without investing a penny more -- you would have more than $2 million by age 80.

I can hear the insurance agents howling, "Oh, sure, but you will have to pay tax on that $2 million."

Wrong again. First, if you are eligible to invest in a Roth IRA, you could have the money grow tax deferred, and then you could withdraw the money in retirement absolutely tax-free. Yes, I realize that the maximum annual contribution is $4,000 for individuals under 50 but if you invest $4,000 rather than $4,150, you still end up with $1.9 million at age 80.

The whole point of this saving is not to have money for yourself, but to build assets for your survivors. Given that scenario, taxes aren't an issue: even if you invest in a regular taxable account, your heirs receive the money on a stepped-up basis, meaning they have no tax bill when they inherit the money.

A Third Option -- If You Must

If you absolutely need to know that you'll "get something back" from an insurance policy, take a look at a term policy that offers a return of premium. I'm not a huge fan of these, but they're a better deal than permanent insurance. As the name implies, with a term ROP policy you'll get your premiums back at the end of the policy term.

The catch is that a ROP term policy costs a lot more than a simple term policy. A 20-year, $500,000 level term policy with an ROP will cost $750 a year for a healthy 30-year-old. That's more than double the $355 it would cost to stick with a simple term policy. But at least it's a lot less than the $4,505 for the whole life policy.

Let's take one more trip to the chalkboard (sorry, I couldn't resist): For 20 years, you pay the $750 annual premium, and if you are alive after 20 years the insurer will pay you $15,000 -- the sum of all your premiums.

But don't pat yourself on the back just yet. If you opt for the simple term policy that runs $355 a year instead, and invest the $395 difference ($750 - $355 = $395), you'll have more than $19,000 saved up in 20 years, assuming an average annual return of 8 percent.

Yes, an ROP term life policy is a better deal than cash value insurance, but for my money, the best deal is still a simple no-frills term policy.

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17 Comments

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  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, February 27, 2007, 7:26PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Suze Orman spews a lot of garbage. Is she claiming to also be an insurance professional? Funny...coming from someone who has filed for bankruptcy more than once!

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, March 4, 2007, 3:11PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Suzy, u r missleading the public. i need coverage until I die which could be at age 95 at which my term insurance would expire and i need to protect my estate. I am gld I listened to my insurance agent than u. u are trying to create contradiction so people would buy ur books which are way too expensive so u can make more money. Yes I do agree sometime term insurance is good other time perminate products. I do have term insurance but It would exprire but atleast I would have my perminate insurance to pay for estate tax and take care of my family. I think you need to educate yourself before giving advise and by the way why do u charge and make soo much money. why not just help the public.

  • MattP - Thursday, March 29, 2007, 10:08AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Unbelievable what this idiot says. I am an insurance agent and completely disagreee with what she says. She makes everything seem so black and white, good and bad. I can't even begin to tell you how many times I have met with people in their 50's and 60's who have only bought term their entire life and now that they are old and in not so good of health, "all of a sudden" they have a need for life insurance, their term rates are astronomical. I am meeting with a couple today who needs about $150,000 of death benefit on the husband. A "simple no-frills term policy" which according to Suzie is "the best deal" is going to cost them over $240 a month. Had they sat down with someone and planned for it beforehand they could have already had a paid up policy that would have protected them for life and it would have cost them probably $55 a month. But what do I know, I'm just a lowly insurance agent.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, July 23, 2007, 9:40PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Suze is absolutely correct. I have checked her advice myself on a savings calculator. The key is to invest that extra money and not just waste it on nice car or a dress. Sink your extra money in your mortrage or Roth Ira. For instance, sink the difference between Term insurance and ROP insurance in your Roth Ira and you will make more money then your returns of premiums at the end of 30 years. NO KIDDING. To the insurance guy who wrote above: You are probably mathematically challenged and finance-illeterate, and therefore, you do not understand what you are talking about. I feel sorry for you. To the lady who wrote about Suze's bankruptcys: it is her testimony that she was financially knowledge-UNequipped when she filed those, and that's the reason she is doing what she is doing today - EDUCATING US, so that you and I can have MAXIMUM prosperity, and with it live the best life we can. And by the way, her books are cheaper than your cable bill for a month, and if you cannot afford her books, then you are in a real bad financial position, and your priority #1 should be buying her book. Sincerely, Computer Engineer, not some uneducated Jo Shmo.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, October 12, 2007, 2:56PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    excellent article

Showing comments 1-5 of 17Next >>
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