Your Health and Life Insurance

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Your Lifestyle Choices Can Impact Your Life Insurance Rates

You make a choice to use tobacco or not. You make a choice to drink alcohol or not. You make a choice to use drugs or not.

These are examples of lifestyle choices that can have a drastic impact on your life insurance eligibility and the cost of a policy.

Tobacco Use and Life Insurance

Tobacco use affects your health. Life insurance companies balance the risk of insuring tobacco users by requiring higher premiums, referred to as smoker or tobacco rates.

Example

John Smith is 30 years old. He applies for a 20-year $500,000 term life insurance policy.

If John was a healthy man who did not use tobacco products, his life insurance rate would be approximately $19.50 per month.

If John was a healthy man who smokes cigarettes, his life insurance rate would be approximately $68.80 per month.

The type of tobacco you use will affect what you pay. Not all tobacco products will receive a smoker rate. In addition, not all life insurance companies evaluate tobacco use in the same way.

» Learn more: Life Insurance for Smokers and Tobacco Users

Alcohol Use and Life Insurance

The occasional alcoholic drink will not impact your life insurance. However, a history of excessive alcohol use will result in higher life insurance rates or perhaps even denial of coverage.

When you apply for life insurance, the underwriter will use medical records (especially those related to treatment for substance abuse and psychiatric illness), social profile, motor vehicle reports, laboratory results, and physical findings in order to assess the risk associated with excessive alcohol consumption. A blood test can also sometimes be used in underwriting to identify those consuming excess alcohol.

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» Learn more: Life Insurance and Alcohol Use: Buyer’s Guide

Drug Use and Life Insurance

Marijuana use is one of the most common lifestyle factors we see in applications.

Some life insurance companies evaluate marijuana use more harshly than others. If you use marijuana, don’t hide this information from your insurance professional. A good independent life insurance broker will be able to lead you to the company that will be most lenient with your marijuana use.

A history of substance abuse, however, is underwritten much differently than marijuana use. Anyone currently abusing a substance will be declined for life insurance coverage. But life insurance companies may consider applicants with a history of abuse, as long as the applicant had discontinued use for, typically, a minimum of two years.

» Learn more: Substance Abuse and Life Insurance

How Life Insurance Pricing Works

Your risk classification is ultimately what determines how much you pay for your life insurance policy. The insurance companies determine an applicant’s risk class during the underwriting process.

The higher the risk, the higher the premium.

During the underwriting process, insurance companies will evaluate your risk factors to determine how much of a risk you would be for them to take you on as a client.

Risk factors include:

Your Age
Your Gender
Personal Medical History
Personal Financial History
Smoker Status
Marijuana Use
Height/Weight
Your Family Medical History
Prescription Record
Motor Vehicle Record
Your Job
Any Risky Hobbies You Participate In
Medical Exam Results

You can’t control all of these factors, like your biological sex or family’s medical history, but you are in control of your own destiny in regards to most of them, like your tobacco use and weight.

Improving your health can help you qualify for better life insurance rates.

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How Medical Underwriting Works

Because life insurance is tied so closely to one’s mortality risk, insurance companies want to understand as much as possible about an applicant’s health before approving the insurance policy.

The insurer will examine the medical history, lifestyle, and other factors that relate to the individual’s medical needs, and, through actuarial analysis, make an estimate of the risk associated with providing coverage.

The Life Insurance Medical Exam

The results from a life insurance medical exam are reviewed during the medical underwriting process. The life insurance medical exam is one way insurance companies can evaluate an applicant’s most up-to-date medical status.

The medical exam is free and the examiner comes to your home or office, wherever is most convenient for you. It lasts 20-30 minutes and includes a blood draw, urine sample collection, and height and weight measurements.

Not everyone is required to get a medical exam when applying for life insurance.

» Learn more: Do I Need a Medical Exam to Get Life Insurance?

Pre-Existing Medical Conditions

You may think that if you have a pre-existing medical condition, such as depression or high cholesterol, that you can’t get life insurance. This isn’t accurate.

Life insurance isn’t just for healthy people. Every person is unique, just like the life insurance companies we work with.

Certain life insurance companies are more lenient with medical conditions than others. A good life insurance broker will be able to match you with the company that will offer you the best rates.

Types of Life Insurance

There are many different life insurance products. For the most part, they can be divided into two categories: term life insurance and permanent life insurance.

Term life insurance provides coverage for a specific period of time. This is the “term” of the policy. If the policyowner dies within the set term of coverage, their beneficiaries will receive a check from the life insurance company. Once the term is over the coverage terminates unless you convert or renew the policy.

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A term life insurance policy can last anywhere from one year to 40 years with coverage amounts ranging from $50,000 to millions of dollars of life insurance coverage. For most people, term life insurance will be the best fit and most affordable option to make sure their family’s future is financially protected.

Permanent life insurance provides coverage for your entire life, as long as the premiums are paid. These policies are much more complex than term policies.

Many permanent life insurance policies have savings components which generate a cash value that you can borrow against as policy loans or withdraw from. Certain permanent policies also pay dividends to policyowners.

Because of the life-long coverage and savings component, permanent life insurance policies are typically 10-15 times more expensive than term life insurance policies.

Those with serious medical conditions may not be eligible for traditional term or permanent policies. But guaranteed issue life insurance may be an option.

Guaranteed issue life insurance is what it sounds like. You’re guaranteed approval even if you have a health condition.

These policies are often referred to as “last resort” life insurance because the applicant usually has already been denied traditional life insurance.

Because the insurance companies are taking on someone with poor health, the premiums for guaranteed issue life insurance can be quite steep. We recommend that you first try applying for traditional life insurance through a broker. If you keep getting declined, then look at guaranteed issue.

» Learn more: Is Guaranteed Issue Life Insurance a Good Option

If you have health concerns, work with a life insurance broker to find the most affordable coverage.