This form will help you determine what sort of life insurance
you may need in order to protect you and your family.
It is most suitable for ordinary people who work for a
living, and neither have enough savings to live on, nor
do they want to end up on State Benefits.
It does not give a quote for cover, for
that you need to contact us, but it does indicate some
potential shortfalls in your present cover.
With regard to cost, the good news is
that most people in reasonable health are surprised at
how affordable cover is, so please do ask us to quote.
(1) The first thing
to protect is your current income. The chances of suffering
from a long term health problem that prevents you from working
is much higher than that of dying before retirement.
(2) If you think
that have cover through work find out exactly what cover.
The question to ask is "if I am told by doctors that I
will never work again, what happens, and how much do I
get?" Good, if not always cheering, answers are "we pay
you for the minimum legal time and then you are on State
Benefits", " three months on full pay then the insurance
gives you half your income, indexed, to retirement", or
"six months pay then you get a sickness pension of, on
your salary, £10,000 a year".
(3) Complete this
section if you have, or expect to have, children. This
is about ensuring that there are funds to ensure that
they can be brought up should anything happen to you.
This calculator does not take into account the term of
any existing cover. It is assumed that the existing cover
is for a sufficient term. This is normally the case for
young families, but may not be true for second fails or
later children. Discuss this with us for a detailed report.
(4) If you have children
who live with their other parent you can arrange a Family
Income Benefit policy written in trust for them. Premiums
can be paid by either you or your ex, whatever the two
of you agree when setting up the policy.
(5) Most people have
life cover for their mortgage, and some people have Critical
Illness insurance. That said it has been possible since
the late 1980's to take on mortgages WITHOUT any insurance
at all, and many single people did so. After all with
no dependants there was no need for insurance. If you
are one of these people consider Critical Illness (it
benefits you if it pays out), and if you now have (or
can foresee) dependants, consider Life Insurance.
(6) Speak to us urgently.
Many otherwise sound businesses do not survive the death
or incapacity of their owner, a disaster for the family,
and largely avoidable, though beyond the scope of this
simple calculator. For now simply enter 150% of your normal
maximum liability (to bank and suppliers, plus three months
cash flow requirements assuming NO income).
(7) Normal practice
is to insure for 50% of your gross income, less any existing
provision.
(8) Normal practice
is to settle on a level of insurance that covers your
mortgage/debts plus between 1 and 3 times gross annual
income depending on your overall financial position .
We simply use twice earnings in this simple guide.
(9) Normal practice,
when dealing with young children is to set up a term such
that the youngest child will have completed University,
(25 years if future children expected). The amount of
cover depends on detailed circumstances, but 50% of income
is assumed for this calculator, with a minimum of £10000.
This level of cover is sufficient to support the surviving
parent if they decide to stop work if children are very
small, or bring in help (au pair, nanny) if older and
the parent wishes to continue working.
(10) Normal practice
is to cover on a 5 year term basis. Ideally a renewable
increasable contract ( so that it can be altered in accordance
with your business growth for the simple reason that maximum
liabilities tend to increase as businesses expand).
This is a type of policy that pays you an income if
you are unable to work do to ill health or disability.
This is an essential insurance if neither your Employer
or State Benefits will suffice.
The income will normally run to State Retirement Age.
The nature of the problem is not normally important,
just that it prevents you working.
The premium depends on your age and health, and also
the type of job you do and any danger inherent in your
hobbies.
The policy normally only pays out after a delay, normally
3 or 6 months, but you can opt for shorter or longer
delays if you wish. The longer the delay, the lower
the premium.
Other options are for the cover to be indexed prior
to claim, and/or index linked during any claim.
This is a type of policy that pays you a lump sum
if you are diagnosed with one of a series of named
conditions, or a condition reaches a certain point.
The core conditions include cancer, heart attack,
stroke and others
The general idea is that these conditions are common,
serious, possibly fatal, and that freedom from money
worries, the option to stop working (even if you could
continue), reduce or clear debts etc. is a helpful
aid to recovery.
The premium depends mainly on your age and health.
Very few employers provide this insurance, (but ask
yours anyway), and there are no State Benefits that
equate to it. In short, if you want it you will almost
certainly have to buy your own.
This is a type of policy that pays out an income if
you die.
The policy is technically known as a Decreasing Term
Policy because the cover goes down as you go along.
For example if you have a £10,000 15 year FIB policy
and die in week one, it pays out £10,000 every year
for the next 25 years (i.e.£250,000 pay out). If you
die at the start of year 20, it pays out for just the
last few years. This makes it very cost effective and
the premiums very affordable.
There comes a time when your children are old enough
for you not to commence any new FIB policies. This
is a judgement call - with a youngest child of 10 you
would want an FIB policy, if your youngest is a mature
self motivated child of 15 and both of you work, maybe
not.
Your employer is unlikely to include FIB in your package,
but ask about Widows/Widowers benefits. If your partner
would get a good pension then you will not need FIB,
(though if you expect to change employers and think
that a future one may not offer such benefits, a modest
low cost FIB policy might be an idea anyway).