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The Role of Insurance in Your Financial Plan

Your financial planning isn't complete until you assess and address your insurance needs. This article describes different types of insurance and suggests ways to make sure you are adequately covered.

Before You Start

  • Gather -- and read -- copies of all your insurance policies that are currently in effect (home, auto, life, long-term care, etc.).
  • Look into insurance coverage, including discounts, that may be available through your employer.
  • Find out if your home or business is located in a community that participates in the Federal Emergency Management Agency's National Flood Insurance Program.
1

The Role of Insurance in Your Financial Plan

Insurance is an important element of any sound financial plan. Different types of insurance protect you and your loved ones in different ways against the cost of accidents, illness, disability, and death.
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2

What Are Your Insurance Needs?

The insurance decisions you make should be based on your family, age, and economic situation. There are many forms of insurance and, unfortunately, no one-size-fits-all policy. Life insurance, for example, is a virtual necessity if you have a spouse and children, but perhaps is less important for a single person. Disability insurance, which provides an income stream if you are unable to work, is important for everyone.

Following is a list of the forms of insurance most people require.
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3

Auto Insurance

Auto insurance protects you from damage to the often considerable investment in a car and/or from liability for damage or injury caused by you or someone driving your vehicle. It can also help cover expenses you or anyone in your car may incur as a result of an accident with an uninsured motorist.

Auto liability coverage is necessary for anyone who owns a car. Many states require you to have liability insurance before a vehicle can be registered. However, state-required minimum coverage often does not provide adequate protection. Suggested minimums are $100,000 for medical expenses per injured person, $300,000 for the total per accident, and $50,000 for property damage. Collision, fire, and theft coverage is also advisable for a vehicle having more than minimal value. You can cut costs, however, by choosing a higher deductible -- the amount of loss that must be exceeded before you are compensated.

The cost of auto insurance varies greatly, depending on the company and agent offering it, your choice of coverage and deductible, where you live, the kind of vehicle, and the ages of drivers in the family. Substantial discounts are often available for safe drivers, nonsmokers, and those who commute to work via public transportation.


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4

Homeowner's Insurance

Homeowner's insurance should allow you to rebuild and refurnish your home after a catastrophe and insulate you from lawsuits if someone is injured on your property. Coverage of at least 80% of your home's replacement value, minus the value of land and foundation, is necessary for you to be covered for the cost of repairs. There are several grades of policies, ranging from HO-1 to HO-8, with increasingly comprehensive coverage and cost. Unless you increase coverage, most homeowner's policies cover the contents of the house for 50% to 75% of the amount for which the house is insured. The liability coverage in many homeowner's policies is $300,000.
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5

Liability Insurance

Often called umbrella liability coverage, this takes effect when the personal liability and lawsuit coverage in other policies is exhausted. The cost for $1 million worth of protection -- especially necessary for high-income individuals and those with considerable assets -- may be only a few hundred dollars a year.
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6

Life Insurance

Life insurance, payable when you die, can provide a surviving spouse, children, and other dependents with the funds necessary to maintain their standards of living, can help repay debt, and can fund education tuition costs. The amount you need depends on your situation. If you make $100,000 a year, have a sizable mortgage, and have two kids headed to an expensive college, you could need $1 million in coverage.

Value-accumulating, but commission-heavy, whole life or universal insurance is often sold as a conservative savings vehicle.

Talk with an insurance agent who offers policies from companies whose financial strength is ranked high by rating agencies. And remember that you can shop around.


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7

Disability Income Insurance

A long-term disability policy is activated, replacing a portion of your lost income, when you are unable to work for an extended period. Some, but certainly not all, employers cover their employees with some form of company-paid disability income insurance. Typically, such coverage is only partial and/or short-term in nature. Thus, many people seek to purchase an individual disability income insurance policy. If you're buying, try to get a noncancelable policy with benefits for life, or at least to age 65, and as much salary coverage as you can afford. However, keep in mind that the duration of coverage may be limited because of your occupation.

Insurers will usually cover up to 65% of your salary. Generally, you should have total coverage equal to two thirds of your current pretax income.

If your company provides disability insurance, check to see whether it's enough for your needs. Group disability insurance policies may be capped at six months and provide benefits that won't cover your expenses.
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8

Health Insurance

Most people enjoy medical insurance as an employee benefit, often with their employers paying whole or part of the premiums. Many employers offer a choice between HMOs (health maintenance organizations) and traditional fee-for-service care. Rates for HMOs are usually cheaper but have more constraints. Privately purchased health insurance is much more expensive -- often by several hundred dollars a month -- depending on such things as deductibles, coverage choices, and location.
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9

Long-Term Care Insurance

With an aging population and uncertainty about the future of Social Security, insurance to cover the high cost of nursing home or at-home health care is becoming more widespread. Medicare pays very little of the cost of long-term care in the United States. Medicaid will pay for the care, but only for patients whose assets are almost completely depleted.

With Congress always debating the future funding of these programs, financial planning for long-term care is more crucial than ever.

Medigap insurance can help pay medical expenses of the elderly not covered by Medicare. However, it doesn't cover custodial nursing home costs. In fact, about half of all nursing home residents pay for the care with personal savings.

Contact a qualified insurance professional or AARP for more information on long-term care insurance.
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Summary

  • Your insurance needs will vary based on your family, age, and economic situation.
  • Anyone who owns a car should have auto liability insurance. Collision, fire, and theft coverage can protect your investment in a valuable car.
  • Homeowner's insurance should provide coverage up to 80% of the cost of replacing your home, minus land and foundation. Homeowners should also have liability coverage, and those with considerable assets may want to purchase liability up to $1 million.
  • Life insurance is important for those who have families to cover living and other expenses in the event of death.
  • Long-term care insurance can be expensive and complex, but may be a necessity for older people as the long-term coverage of Medicare is often inadequate.

Checklist

  • Calculate your life insurance income-replacement needs (the amount of money survivors would require in order to maintain long-term financial security).
  • Make a list of each policy's expiration date. A few months before those dates, start shopping around for better deals.
  • If your home's value has increased recently, determine its current replacement value and then make sure that your home insurance policy would provide enough money to rebuild.
  • Shop around for long-term care insurance and disability insurance if you don't have them already.

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53 Comments

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  • garys - Monday, February 19, 2007, 5:09PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    I agree with most of your article and yes most people know they need it but very few are willing to sit down and talk about it. Your jab at whole life and universal life is off base when they are sold proberly. Term insurance is exactly what it says you can certainly out live in, then your in the same boat as people who never but. So would you rather buy a home or rent one.

  • SEan - Monday, April 9, 2007, 5:34PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I have to agree wih heatcoach3030 in that your biased opinion of whole life and universal life insurance is unnecessary. If this article is to be honest, please don't just always lean toward term insurance which is always sold as "cheapest". You pay for what you get. Also, is your retirement plan only standing on two legs? If you make too much money to contribute to a Roth IRA, what is the other vehicle that allows you to slam it full of money and pull it out income tax free when you retire? Oh yeah...whole life and universal life insuance! If everyone only bought cheapest, they would also have to pay the most taxes because they would end up with only taxable dollars during retirement. Please revise your biased stance.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, April 14, 2007, 3:17PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    How can you possibly back any kind of cash value life insurance. I don't know about you but I'd much pay the cheaper premiums of a 30 year fixed term and invest the difference. If I happen to die during that 30 year period my family gets the death benefit AND the money from the investment. Unlike cash value insurance in which my family gets the death benefit and the life insurance company keeps the cash value. So if I had 100 thousand dollar policy with 20 thousand of cash value, the insurance company is on the hook for only 80 thousand. If you could save 100 dollars a month on a 100 thousand dollar policy (less than average), and you invest that 100 a month for 30 years at 10% you would end up with 228 thousand dollars in your investment. People are realizing this and that is why many people are now buying term and investing the difference. Cash value life insurance should not be a part of anyone's financial plan.

  • AlbertoA - Tuesday, May 22, 2007, 4:41PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    As far as the Yahoo Financial user goes I truly hope you are not a financial advisor to anyone but yourself. While using such asset vehicles as ROTHs, IRAs, 401(k)s, stocks and bonds, Fixed Annuities and Variable Annuities one should cosider Cash Value Life insurance in your asset portfolio as a way to add diversification. Also you can't compare the returns in the stock market to the returns in a Cash Value policy, they are two completly different asset classes one is high risk and the other is low risk. If you are going to be honest with yourself and everyone else out there you need to compare it to something that will be earning 5-6%, such as a Muni bond or other type of bond. Muni bonds are better because they are also tax free growth and income, the difference between the two is that with Muni bond you only get to pass on the value of the bond at death (to your spouse) with out any estate issue, where as in most cases the life insurance policy has the added benefit of the higher death benefit. Also if you buy your policy with a financially sound company and work with an agent that knows the ins and outs of the contract you will be able to leave your loved one's both the death benefit and the amount accumilated in the policy. But I digress, when you compare the cash value in a policy growing at a rate of even 4-6% on a tax defered basis that is the equivlant of getting 8-9% on a taxable basis... when was the last time you saw a banks CD paying 8-9%?? And the idea of buy term and invest the difference is a good idea in theory but you could do the same by renting an appartment and investing the difference on a mortgage!! Why don't financial advisors tell their clients to go out and sell their homes move into an appartment and invest the difference? Because it is a bad idea, you are building equity in you home just as you build "equity" in your CV policy. Also as noted already, if you have the problem of making too much money to qualify for the Roth then a CV policy allows you stuff much more money away to be used later on a tax deferred and sometimes tax free basis.... again a competent financial advisor or insurance agent can help you build that. So many times in this business do I see people who have their financial homes upside down, that when I show them how to build a true foundation using the insurance products mentioned in this article they are amazed and discusted with what their other advisor told them that I end up with their intire portfoilio... and don't sell all the stuff mentioned. And those that have decided to move thier money over to allow me to help guide them, they have more protection in place and are able to be more agressive in the areas that they want to be agressive in without the nagging worry of what will happen if they lose their job, become disabled for a period longer than 6 months, or G*d forbid there is a death in the family. That is only because they have a solid plan in place and no one can shake it up.

  • Tateness - Tuesday, June 26, 2007, 4:48PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Your right on the money man! I couldn't have said it better myself. This isn't my boss is it?

Showing comments 1-5 of 53Next >>

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