Life Insurance
Life Insurance is a simple answer to a difficult question
You’re Married
You’re Married With Kids
You’re a Stay-At-Home Parent
You Have Grown Children
You’re a Small-Business Owner
You’re Single
Term insurance
The most affordable type of insurance. It provides protection for a specific period of time (the “term”) and generally pays a benefit only if you die during that term. This type of insurance often makes sense when you have a need for coverage that will disappear at a specific point in time. For instance, you may decide that you only need coverage until your children graduate from college or a particular debt is paid off, such as your mortgage.
Endowment insurance
An endowment policy is essentially a life insurance policy which, apart from covering the life of the insured, helps the policyholder save regularly over a specific period of time so that he/she is able to get a lump sum amount on the policy maturity in case he/she survives the policy term. This maturity amount can be used to meet various financial needs such as funding one’s retirement, children’s education and/or marriage or buying a house. A life insurance endowment policy pays the full sum assured to the beneficiaries if the insured dies during the policy term or to the policy holder on maturity of the policy if he/she survives the term.
Unit Linked insurance
Unlike a pure insurance policy, gives investors both insurance and investment under a single integrated plan. ULIP provides investment options to invest in any number of qualified investments such as stocks, bonds or mutual funds.
Whole Life insurance
by contrast, provides lifelong protection. As long as you pay the premiums and no loans, withdrawals, or surrenders are taken, the full amount will be paid. Because it is designed to last a lifetime, whole life insurance accumulates cash value and is priced for you to keep it over a long period of time. It’s impossible to say which type of life insurance is better because the kind of coverage that’s right for you depends on your unique circumstances and financial goals.