How to minimize the cost of your life insurance
The annual premium you’re charged with by the insurance company for covering your life strongly depends on the current state of your health, your age and the lifestyle you follow. This way, older people with smoking habits and serious health problems are likely to pay times more than the amount the younger and healthier individuals. Still, even if you make part of the first, riskier category you can find ways to lower the costs of insuring your life. You will definitely find the following suggestions useful when determining your insurance rates, and the more of them you will stick to, the more you will manage to save.
1. Consider changing the amount of your coverage
Quite often getting a bigger amount of insurance coverage will actually give you a lower rate. For example, most companies will offer a $260 annual premium for $250,000 in coverage, while having $245,000 will cost you about $20 more in annual premiums. Make sure to learn what is the premium per every $1000 of your coverage with every particular company you think getting a policy from. This way you will be able to get the most coverage for the lowest price.
2. Look for a compassionate insurance provider
Some insurance carriers tend to offer affordable rates to individuals with conditions such as cancer, diabetes or other serious diseases. It is better to work with a company, the employees of which tend to study each case individually and offer a respective rate rather than giving everyone with the same condition just one price tag.
3. Change your lifestyle
Kicking bad habits like drinking and smoking, starting to exercise regularly and loosing extra weight will put you into a lower risk category with the insurance company and your rates will drop significantly. In fact, some companies charge smokers with a double rate of what non-smoker pay for life insurance. However, you should be absolutely honest with the insurer here, because if you lie and end up having habit-related disease, the company is likely to not pay out your death benefit at all. Read the rest of this entry »
