Living Benefits as part of your Life Insurance Can Be the Support You Need in a Health Crisis




Living Benefits Can Be the Support You Need in a Health Crisis

There are not many ways to get an early payout from a life insurance policy, but you can if you have a rider to your policy that will allow you to take out funds if you end up fighting a serious medical condition.

Accelerated benefits, also known as "living benefits," are life insurance proceeds paid to the policyholder before he or she dies. The benefits may be provided in the policies themselves, but more typically they are added by riders or attachments to new or existing policies.

 

How they work

The accelerated benefits option or rider in a life policy provides that all or a portion of the policy's proceeds will be paid to the insured upon the occurrence of specified events.

These can include:

  • Terminal illness, with death expected within a specified period, usually six months to one year.
  • The occurrence of a specified serious illness, such as heart attack, major stroke, certain types of cancer, kidney or liver failure.
  • The need for long-term care due to an inability to perform a number of "activities of daily living," such as bathing, dressing and eating.
  • Permanent nursing home confinement.

 In these instances, the life insurance company will deduct the accelerated benefits payment from the death benefit it ultimately pays to the beneficiary.

Some insurers add accelerated benefits to life insurance policies for a small additional premium, usually computed as a percentage of the base premium. A growing number of companies, however, offer these benefits at no additional premium, but charge the policyholder for the option only if and when it is used.

In most cases, the company will reduce the benefits advanced to the policyholder before death to compensate it for the interest it will lose on its early payout. There may also be a nominal service charge.

These options are usually added to universal life insurance policies or other permanent life policies. Some insurers are beginning to offer them with term life policies as well.

Accelerated benefit options are usually offered when you purchase a new life insurance policy, but some insurers will also add them to existing policies.

 Payment

Insurers offer anywhere from 25% to 100% of the death benefit as early payment. The amount varies according to the type of policy and company.

Sometimes, payments are made in monthly installments, at other times in a lump sum. Most policies allow the policyholder to choose the method of payment. Each policy or rider specifies the method available.

 Considerations

There are several important issues you should consider before getting a living benefits rider:

  • People usually buy life insurance to protect spouses and children in the event of their death. A policyholder must consider how electing accelerated benefits will affect their survivors. If the death benefit is used up entirely when an accelerated benefit is paid, there would be nothing left to be paid to the beneficiary.
  • Accelerated benefits are not a form of health insurance, nor are they intended to replace the need for comprehensive health or long-term care insurance.
  • The IRS is clarifying the tax status of accelerated benefits. You should direct any specific questions you have about taxes to your accountant or other tax adviser.
  • Collecting accelerated benefits may affect eligibility for Medicaid. According to the Health Care Financing Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, policyholders cannot be forced to request or collect accelerated benefits before qualifying for Medicaid benefits. But once accelerated benefits are elected, those funds could be considered income that might affect Medicaid eligibility.

Comments

Popular Posts