Life insurance is one of the selfless gifts you can give to the people you would leave behind if you pass away.
Life insurance is not as complicated or expensive as many people may think. So, rather than view it as such, consider what it could mean to your loved ones someday if they lost you — and think of it instead as a way to ease some of the worry during a difficult time.
Here are five reasons why life insurance is important.
Life insurance is not for you — it's for your family
If you think you don’t need life insurance, you’re right — technically, at least. You don’t purchase life insurance for yourself. You purchase it for the loved ones you leave behind.
Here are the ways life insurance can help loved ones in your absence.
Short-term family needs
Upon your death, would your spouse, partner or children be able to pay the rent? Afford the bills? How about pay for funeral, burial or cremation costs, which average between $5,000 and $10,000?1
At a time of great emotional stress, financial concerns can pile on — especially if they are forced to move, re-enter the workforce or make other significant lifestyle changes.
Would you leave behind significant credit card debt or student loans? If you’re young and your parents cosigned on your loans, they may be liable for your debt.
Life insurance can help keep your family members from having to tackle large financial issues when they may be least equipped to do so.
Long-term family needs
Your family can feel the economic impact of your loss well into the future.
Sometimes family members must make major changes that create additional expenses, such as a non-working spouse returning to the workforce and needing to pay for daycare. Life insurance proceeds can help cover those new expenses.
If you have children, life insurance can help provide stability and normalcy in their lives — for example, remaining in their school district, participating in sports, having the ability ability to pursue post-secondary education or other dreams.
Perhaps your family includes a child, sibling or parent who is disabled and will require lifelong assistance and financial support. Life insurance can help ensure the continuity of their care.
Protection for your business
For business owners, life insurance can help your business keep its lights on, employees paid and vendors satisfied in the event you die unexpectedly.
Life insurance may not be as expensive as you assume
Let’s address this first, because it seems to be a stumbling block for many people.
While the cost of life insurance coverage depends on a lot of variables like age, sex, overall health and type of policy, it typically costs far less than people think.
In fact, for healthy people under age 40, a $500,000 20-year term policy can be less than $32 per month for men and $25 for women. If you're under age 30, it can cost less than $30 per month.2
Naturally, as you age, buying life insurance becomes more expensive because your health declines and the odds of dying sooner increase. So lock your rate in now while you’re young and healthy and save yourself from paying a higher premium later.
When you finally need life insurance, you may not be able to qualify
Not all deaths are unexpected — in fact, more adults age 25-44 die each year from serious illness than by accidental injury.3
Unfortunately, by the time someone is diagnosed with a serious illness, it is often too late to get life insurance coverage. You can help ensure your family is able to stay in their home and not dip into savings by having life insurance.
It can be an additional source of funds
All life insurance is not the same. While term insurance is just that — a temporary policy that lasts for a specific time period and then ends — permanent life insurance is meant to cover you for the remainder of your life.
Permanent life insurance also accumulates cash value. Each policy may differ, but typically, alongside there being a payment upon death, you can use it to withdraw cash, take a policy loan to borrow cash you repay later, or terminate your policy and take its value in cash.
When permanent life insurance policies are obtained when people are younger, they may be able to use the cash value to help fund important events in their lives, such as a college education or additional income in retirement.
Life insurance can help you leave a legacy
When you purchase life insurance, you choose at least one beneficiary — the people or entities that would receive a benefit from your policy.
In addition to naming family members as beneficiaries, some people choose to name their church, favourite charity or nonprofit organization that supports causes they care about.
In some cases, life insurance can enable you to give in death more than you might have been able to donate to the cause during your lifetime.