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Ways to get best life insurance rates
By Pat
Curry Bankrate.com
If you ask 10 different experts how to buy life insurance,
you'll get at least 10 different answers.
The debates rage over a variety of topics, such as
what kind of insurance is best; buying from an agent or through
the Internet; the right amount of coverage you need; and even what
the true purpose of life insurance should be.
No wonder people get confused.
Despite the opposing views, the experts do agree on
several strategies to get the best deal on a life insurance policy:
Honesty's the best policy
At the top of the list is honesty. Don't lie on the application
about your health. People do that sometimes if they think telling
the truth will result in being turned down.
"Lack of disclosure is one of the biggest things
that comes back to bite consumers," says Randy Herz, vice president
and chief financial officer of Connecticut-based Herz Financial
Group. "Underwriters hate uncertainty. If it doesn't get on
your application correctly and it shows up on your medical record,
underwriters think you're lying to them and won't offer you as good
a deal."
If you smoke, don't deny it. A family history of heart
disease or diabetes isn't an automatic rejection, but some insurance
companies are more comfortable with those policies than others.
You probably won't get the best rate, but you're probably not uninsurable,
either.
Time is on your side
A more involved way to get the best rate is to schedule your medical
test for first thing in the morning. The time of day that you take
your medical test is so important that Lynne Rosenberg Kidd won't
even look at a policy with a test done later in the day.
"If someone took the exam after dinner, I just
send it back," says Kidd, who is president of Innovative
Solutions Insurance Services, a national brokerage insurance
agency that finds policies for agents.
The reasons are fairly simple. Your blood pressure
is lower and your cholesterol is better in the morning. You're also
less stressed out early in the day. Plus, you need to fast before
the blood tests, so you want to get them out of the way so you can
have breakfast. To get the most accurate results, avoid salts and
heavy sugars. Stay way from alcohol, drugs and caffeine, and don't
exercise before the test.
"Exercise can cause liver functions or sugars
to be off," Herz says. "In people who are big runners,
it's common for sugars to be off. Avoid ibuprofens and Tylenol and
any type of stress if you're going to do an EKG. Go to bed at 9
p.m. and have the nurse or doctor show up at your house at 7 a.m."
Herz also suggests you may get better deals toward
the end of each quarter and the end of the year when insurance companies
are working to reach their sales goals. "There is a timing
issue involved," he says. "A lot of companies want to
make their numbers at the end of the year."
Kidd says a company's most-competitive pricing probably
will be in the middle classification rather than in its preferred
rates, which only cover 20 percent to 30 percent of the market.
Watch for falling rates
Don't think that once you get insurance, you're locked into that
rate forever. They've dropped significantly in the last decade.
"Rates in the last 10 years on a typical term
policy have fallen by 60 percent," says Byron Udell, president
of the Web-based insurance brokerage AccuQuote.
"A 40-year-old male in 1994 would pay $995 for
the very best rate for $500,000 worth of coverage for 20 years.
That same plan today is $390. The information age has caused a phenomenal
flow of information. There's better information from blood tests.
People are living longer. There's better health care. It's a phenomenal
time for people to take a look at policies they took out three or
four years ago."
You also can reapply for a lower rate if there have
been changes in your health, Kidd says. "If you've had some
cholesterol problems or gained some weight, you may not be able
to change your product," Kidd says, "but if you lost weight
or got your cholesterol under control, or had a borderline EKG and
got that under control, go back and reapply."
Shop around for agents
One of the easiest ways to get the best deal, of course, is to do
what all smart consumers do: shop around. Experts usually recommend
going to an independent agent who has access to a wide range of
policies. Don't stop there.
"Shop at least a couple of agents," says
Steve Pomerantz, a certified financial planner in Boca Raton, Fla.
"It's a big decision. You're making a big commitment for many
years."
-- Posted: July 28, 2004
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