Karl
Klinger, CFP®,
CLU®At one point, the buzzword was "viatical settlements", a practice of
selling one's active life insurance policy to a company that would pay
the insured the estimated present value of the death benefit so
uninsured healthcare costs and related expenses could be paid. Such
settlements grew in popularity during the 1980s AIDS crisis, when
insured individuals, mostly young men at the time, desperately needed
funds for what was at the time an almost guaranteed death sentence. That
business eventually attracted some unscrupulous dealers.
Today, with healthcare costs rising with the number of uninsured
Americans from all walks of life, the new buzzword is "accelerated death
benefits" -- riders on life insurance policies that allow an individual
who is terminally ill or facing significant long-term care costs to draw
down a portion of the death benefit to pay for those expenses.
It may be a tantalizing option for people who fear their own personal
health insurance won't pay for health care costs in their old age, but
it's worth studying these riders and whether there are better options to
cover the cost of care. A Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional can help you review the options that fit you best. Here are
some basics:
WHAT COMMONLY TRIGGERS AN ACCELERATED DEATH BENEFIT? On most
policies that feature this rider, these four situations will commonly
trigger the payment of at least a portion of the death benefit:
The diagnosis of a terminal, chronic or specific physical illness where death is likely within a set period of time;
The diagnosis of certain catastrophic illnesses requiring extraordinary medical treatment;
Permanent nursing home confinement.
Most riders are activated by a catastrophic disease such as heart
attack, stroke, coronary artery bypass surgery, kidney failure, or
life-threatening cancer. It's particularly rare for this coverage to pay
for an organ transplant, AIDS or paraplegia. It's particularly important
to check on what's not covered.
WOULDN'T LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE BE A BETTER INVESTMENT?
Possibly. No one can know what their afflictions might be 10, 20 or 30
years from now, but a discussion with one's doctor, a Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional, and maybe a look back at family health history can be a
worthwhile exercise in thinking about what total healthcare costs can be
and whether a long-term care insurance policy (optimally bought as close
to the age of 50 as possible) can provide more financial security.
WHAT ARE THE TAX ISSUES? Since life insurance proceeds are
generally not subject to tax for beneficiaries, accelerated death
benefits aren't either -- but it pays to check with a tax professional
to see if this is the case for you.
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This article was
produced by The Financial Planning Association.
200803 2008-1144 |