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    15 Insurance Policies You Don't Need

    Fantasy Finance

    Fear of the future sells insurance. Because we can't predict the future, we want to be ready to cover our financial needs if, or when, something bad happens. Insurance companies understand this fear and offer a variety of insurance policies designed to protect us from a host of calamities that range from disability to disease and everything in between. While none of us wants anything bad to happen, many of the potential catastrophes that happen in our lives are not worth insuring against. In this article, we'll take you through 15 policies that you're probably better off without.

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    1. Private Mortgage Insurance

    The infamous private mortgage insurance (PMI) is well known to homeowners because it increases the amount of their monthly mortgage payments. PMI is an insurance policy that protects the lender against loss when lending to a higher-risk borrower. The borrower pays for this insurance but derives no benefit. Fortunately, there are several ways to avoid paying for this unnecessary policy. PMI is required if you purchase a home with a down payment of less than 20% of the home's value. The small down payment is viewed as putting you at risk of defaulting on the loan. Put down at least 20% and the PMI requirement goes away. Alternatively, you can put down 10% and take out two loans, one for 80% of the sale price of the property and one for 10%, although interests rates can prevent the economics of this maneuver from working out in the homeowner's favor.

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    2. Extended Warranties

    Extended warranties are available on a host of appliances and electronics. From a consumer's perspective, they are rarely used, particularly on small items such as DVD players and radios. If you purchase a reputable, brand-name product, you can be fairly certain it will work as advertised and that the extended warranty is statistically likely to be unnecessary. If you spend $5,000 on a giant, flat-screen television, the policy is still unlikely to pay off, but might make you feel better. For everything else, forget it.

    3. Automobile Collision

    Collision insurance is designed to cover the cost of repairs to your vehicle if you are involved in an accident. If you have a loan out on the car, the loan issuer is likely to require that you have collision insurance. If your car is paid off, collision is optional; therefore, if you have enough money in the bank to cover the cost of a new car, collision insurance may be an unnecessary expense. This is particularly true if you are driving an old car, because cars depreciate so quickly that many vehicles are worth only a fraction of their purchase price by the time the loan is paid in full.

    4. Rental Car Insurance

    Most auto insurance policies offer additional coverage for the cost of car rentals, touting it as a useful feature if your car is ever involved in an accident and needs to spend some time in the repair shop. This may sound like a good idea, but in reality, most people rarely rent a car, and when they do, the cost is relatively low and hardly worth insuring against. Although rental car insurance is relatively inexpensive, amortized over the course of a lifetime you are still likely to spend far more than you will benefit.

    5. Car Rental Damage Insurance

    Many auto insurance policies already cover rentals, so there's no need to pay for this twice. Check your policy before you pay. Depending on where you rent the vehicle, you may also be able to pay a small fee for insurance on your rental when you pick it up at the rental center. If this fee is less than what you'd pay for a year in your old policy, choose the fee over the policy.

    6. Flight Insurance

    Flight insurance coverage is completely unnecessary. Despite media portrayal, airline accidents are relatively rare, and your life insurance policy should already provide coverage in the event of a catastrophe.

    7. Water Line Coverage

    Water companies have made an aggressive push to sell policies that cover the repair of the water line that runs from the street to your house. The odds are in your favor that you will never use this coverage, particularly if you live in a newer home. If you live an average suburban neighborhood and you do need to repair the water line, the distance to the street is short, the likelihood of a problem is low and repair costs are a few thousand dollars or less. The same goes for policies offered by other utility companies.

    8. Life Insurance for Children

    Life insurance is designed to provide a safety net for your heirs/dependents. Because children don't have heirs to worry about and, statistically speaking, most kids will grow up safe and healthy, most parents should not purchase life insurance for their kids. Instead, use the money that you would have spent on life insurance to fund an education plan or an individual retirement account (IRA).

    9. Flood Insurance

    Unless you live in a flood plain or an area with a history of water problems, don't even bother buying flood insurance. If none of the homes in the area has ever been flooded, yours is unlikely to be the first.

    10. Credit Card Insurance

    Purchasing coverage to pay your credit card bill in the event you cannot pay it is a waste of money. A far better idea is to avoid running up your credit cards in the first place, so you won't need to worry about the bills. Not only do you not save on the insurance premiums, you'll also save the interest on your debt.

    11. Credit Card Loss Insurance

    Federal law limits your liability if your credit card is stolen. Your out-of-pocket costs are limited to $50 per card and not a penny more. In fact, many credit card companies don't even try to collect the $50.

    12. Mortgage Life Insurance

    Mortgage life insurance pays off your house in the event of your death. Rather than add another policy - and another bill - to your list of insurance plans, it makes more sense to get a term-life policy instead. A good life insurance policy will provide enough money to pay off the mortgage and to cover other expenses as well. After all, the mortgage isn't the only bill your survivors will need to pay.

    13. Unemployment Insurance

    This coverage makes minimum payments on your bills if you are out of work, which sounds like an attractive proposition. A better plan is to save your money and build up an emergency fund instead. You won't have to cover the cost of the insurance policy and, if you are never out of work, you won't spend any money at all.

    14. Disease Insurance

    Policies are available to cover cancer, heart disease and other maladies. Instead of trying to identify every possible disease that you may encounter, get a good medical coverage policy instead. This way, your medical bills will be covered regardless of the problem you face.

    15. Accidental-Death Insurance

    Unless you are extraordinarily accident prone, an accident is unlikely. Major catastrophes such as car wrecks and fires are covered under other policies, as is any harm that comes to you while at work. Accidental-death policies are often fraught with stipulations that make them difficult to collect on, so skip the hassles and get life insurance instead.

    When Choosing Insurance

    There are so many policies to chose from, and they all cost money. While a certain amount of insurance coverage is necessary and prudent, you need to choose carefully. In general, broad policies that offer coverage for a multitude of potential events are a better choice than limited-scope policies that focus on specific diseases or potential incidents. Before you buy any policy, read it carefully to make sure that you understand the terms, coverage and costs. Don't sign on the dotted line until you are comfortable with the coverage and are sure that you need it.

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    19 comments

    • m  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  4 days ago
      As well, When refinancing my car at 45k miles thru my credit union they offered me an opportunity to pick up an extended warranty for a reasonable cost of only an extra $1500. With my new rate at only 5% it was a small blip to my payment so i agreed. Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it was my thinking. At 71k miles with my factory warranty expired it was determined that my transmission was needing to be replaced. The torque converter was eating itself alive. While at the dealer a valve seat let go inside the engine and cracked the block when it took out the piston. Warranty covered everything including the one week rental car bill. $1500 up front covered $12k after the fact. May not happen often but in my case with an extremely well cared for vehicle it paid for itself this time..So the additional savings up and above the cost of the warranty is the fact that with a brand new engine and transmission in a very clean 2006 i will be keeping this car much longer now instead of investing in another brand new one....Better to have it and not need it thant to need it and not have it. Just shop around HARD for the best company and coverage that you can find.....As well people laughed when my father put life insurance on his four boys back in the 60's. Then by 1976 my younger brother took his own life. The insurance coverage over the bariel saved my mother, single at the time. Much more grief and hardship...Just sayin
    • m  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  4 days ago
      Insurance companies have traditionally being the highest profit earners of all time
    • number1bearsfan34  •  1 month 12 days ago
      The insurance market is the biggest scam I've ever seen.FYI.......if you keep the same insurance company for more then 1 to 2 years your prices go up so its a good thing to change companys. Being a loyal customer will drain your pockets.
      • Bill 1 month 0 days ago
        Not true with Farmers Insurance bearsfan. I know, I am a Farmers Insurance agent.
    • Disappointed  •  Knoxville, Tennessee  •  2 months ago
      Given the electronics in modern kitchen appliances today, I ignored
      traditional advice and bought extended warranties. My refrigerator has 3 mother boards.
      In the first month I had two service calls.
    • Tim  •  Warren, Ohio  •  2 months ago
      The only people who advocate cash value "permanent" insurance are insurance agents and insurance companies, because it benefits and enriches them while giving their client the least amount of insurance for the highest price. No credible financial planner EVER recommends cash value insurance unless their client is uber-wealthy and simply wants a place to stash some cash for a while without having to pay taxes on it. Buy term and invest the difference in anything you want as long as it's not an insurance company. They don't have YOUR best interests at heart, they have their best interests at heart and if you believe otherwise you're just very gullible or stupid.
      • Bill 1 month 0 days ago
        Not true Tim. Those people that lost nearly all in the stock crash of 2008 will never recoup all they lost while my clients had an universal life policy grew minimum 3% cash value every year. In the long run, guaranteed cash value life policies are better than gambling with the stock market. I rather not gamble with my clients retirements.
      • Tim 1 month 0 days ago
        Oh yea... universal life... the wonderful policies that self-destruct as you get older. Read the contract, in depth, and you'll see that as the client gets older the cost of the insurance gets prohibitively expensive until the cost of the coverage starts taking money away from the "guaranteed" cash value and over a period of years the policy self-destructs. That's true. That's exactly what happens. Read the contract.
        I assure you, you'll have plenty of clients wanting to kill you in the future because you misled them either through your own ignorance or simply because you're greedy, already know what I've told you and just don't care. I hope you policy is paid up.
      • Tim 1 month 0 days ago
        I meant, I hope your policy is paid up.
    • Tim Morris  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 months ago
      I agree with Matthew on the child insurance. I sell term insurance so I don't agree with the cash value of whole life. I know with our policy on the child that if you insure them each child is insured for the same amt. no mater how many you have for one price. Also, if they happen to become uninsurable for any reason we will still guarantee coverage at age 25 to five times their current coverage at a standard rate. It is also hard loosing a child also.
      • Money 2 months ago
        The early death of a child can be the most devastating emotional event to any parent. Emotions may prohibit one or both parent from working at full capacity for an unknown time. Insurance can provide the money to allow parents to grieve in private.
      • Clarence B 1 month 25 days ago
        Whole life or permanent policies were never designed to accumulate large sums of cash, but inexperienced agents have been trained to sell policies based on that feature. I've been an insurance agent for 27 years and both are equally important. I usually package whole life and term together. The whole life takes care of the final expenses, while the term is used for income protection and/or to cover children until they reach the age of 22.
    • Javier Reyes  •  San Juan Capistrano, California  •  4 months ago
      Disagree with the Life Insurance for children. Why would you put that in an IRA when people lost 30%, 40% and some 50% of there retirement. Under permanent insurance there will be no lost and when the kid decides to retire you better believe he will have a lot of cash value under a Index Universal Life policy.
      • df 2 months ago
        Also, don't you have to have "earned income" to contribute to an IRA? Most kids won't start working until they are 13 or 14. By that point a whole life insurance policy will have enough cash value that you could contribute to an IRA and let the cash value pay some or all of the premium of the ins. policy.
    • Joshua Leonard  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
      I am an agent who sells mortgage protection, and I can tell you that it is well worth the money. No, not because I sell it, because it is a product that was introduced by multiple insurance companies to enhance the options of responsible homeowners who cared about paying off their mortgage if something happened to them. Not only that, many policies derived from the mortgage protection policy allows someone who is still living that becomes disabled to pull income from that policy to pay for their house. Yes, mortgage life insurance would be a waste to those who don't care. The End.
      • as 2 months ago
        Hope people read your post and act on it. One policy will not take care of the lost income and pay off the mortgage. We had this insurance until our home was paid off...
      • Money 2 months ago
        There is nothing wrong with having multiple policies. Building a portfolio of life insurance assets is equivalent to buying more than one bond and saying your investing for retirement is completed.
    • MatthewR  •  Allentown, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
      What "experts" don't realize about life insurance on children is that you are insuring YOUR income. I lost a son at 5 1/2 years old and couldn't work for 6 months. That, plus final expenses nearly bankrupted us. Also, the most likely scenario is your child lives a long, healthy life. Then the cash value in a permanent policy will be worth far more than you ever paid. Just do your homework on the company and buy a whole life policy that pays dividends.
    • Mudflat  •  3 months ago
      Don't rely on real estate agents, mortgage companies, title companies or anyone else for advice on flood insurance. Just because it is not "required" by them or law does not mean you don't need it. Many thousands learned the hard way that a flood could happen to them.
    • Christina Walker  •  Churchville, Maryland  •  3 months ago
      I am an insurance agent - And I see the benefits of insurance on a daily basis. That being said, I can also see the other side as well-People who pay for insurance and never use it. The fact of the matter is this-You purchase Insurance, with the hope that you will never have to use it and to ENSURE that should you need to..You can. I hate paying my insurance too! Honestly, who likes paying for something intangible? I know I don't, but I will say this, when I have a client in front of me handing me the death certificate, for their 4 year old, who has unexpectantly passed away, being able to tell them that the Juvenile life policy that they took out when the child was born is now going to take the burden of a $12K funeral expense off their already too heavy shoulders.
    • Just a soldier  •  Fort Wayne, Indiana  •  4 months ago
      It appears the author's justification for not paying these types of insurance is to just not put yourself in the position of needing them in the first place. Yeah, great advice, thanks for that.
      I'll make sure to never get sick, lose my job, or have an airplane I'm flying in crash. o.O

      The best has got to be "if you have enough money in the bank to cover the cost of a new car, collision insurance may be an unnecessary expense". Of course! Why didn't I think of that?!? Instead of having insurance to fix my wrecked car, I'll just spend thousands of dollars of my money to buy a new one!!!
    • Anthony M  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  4 months ago
      I disagree with buying life insurance on children. Permenant life insurance for children at this point is just as effect as a 529 college saving account. With the market being where it is permanent life insurance allows you to grow in a tax friendly environment with no down fall
    • WhyMe  •  4 months ago
      While your auto insurance may cover rental cars the optional insurance at the dealer lets you turn in the car, no matter the condition, and walk away. No forms, no ding on your insurance rates. Although it has been a few years since I rented a car, unless the rates have sky rocketed, I have found this to be a useful coverage to have.
    • An American  •  Lenexa, Kansas  •  5 months ago
      One of the best things that I have done is to get life insurance on my children. My oldest has had leukemia twice and will never be insurable. The juvenile policy that I bought for her is now free and she has the right (through acommon and inexpensive rider) to buy hundreds of thousands more in life insurance. She has a right to buy more - no questions asked - every three years until she is 48 years old. As a pre-med student, it is now the most valuable asset that she owns.
      The author should have done more research or thought this through a little better....
    • Gnosis  •  Fort Worth, Texas  •  4 months ago
      Products and Services are NOT to be offered at the end of a gun.
    • Bill  •  4 months ago
      That's nice at Christmas time - an insurance company shill and his phony tale of woe. One needs life insurance, only IF one has dependents. Otherwise all one needs is a few thousand for cremation or burial. In addition, given the rate at which physicians can accumulate wealth, they only need insurance when they are young (and with dependents of course), as well.
    • Richard V  •  Miami, Florida  •  4 months ago
      Insurance Cares about one thing and one thing only PROFIT. No sorry they don't care about you.
    • Greg  •  1 month 10 days ago
      Seems to me that we should add health insurance to this list. My monthly payment is $750, or $9,000 a year, plus a $3,000 deductible. That's 12K before I see a penny of it.

      Yes, I know, I do need catastrophic coverage, so I might as well get something with a much lower premium and, say, a $10,000 deductible. And, I would, but I have pre-existing conditions, so no insurance company will give me the time of day.

      Since I'm stuck with this $750 a month policy (and it's set to go up another 10% next year), I'm thinking about having no insurance, and just joining the 50million+ Americans who don't have any either. It's a joke!

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