The high insurance price of a risky life
By Jay
MacDonald Bankrate.com
Driving
fast cars, surfing monster waves, bungee jumping off bridges and
air boarding in free fall may be great ways to get a rush. But for
the ultimate extreme experience, try landing affordable life insurance
with your death-defying pastime.
If your lifestyle is closer to "The Fast and
the Furious" than "The Young and the Restless," you
can expect to pay twice or even three times more than your couch-potato
roommate for the same life insurance coverage.
"The bottom line is: Is what you're doing dangerous?
Are you risking your life by doing it? It's almost common sense.
You could figure the rate yourself," says William
Carroll, an actuary with the American
Council of Life Insurers.
Don't misunderstand, dude. Life insurers want to write
you a policy. That's their business. They're not out to harsh your
bliss. But neither do they want to shell out major Benjamins the
first time you pack your parachute backward.
"We're looking for ways to qualify people, not
disqualify people," says Carroll. "But there are people
who disqualify themselves by what they do."
Relax. There are ways to get the coverage you want
-- and even a couple tricks to nudge those extreme payments down
-- without giving up the thrills you love.
Extreme sports, extreme premiums
Let's face it, if you were a life insurer, you wouldn't offer
your best rate to Vin Diesel, would you?
Life insurance actuaries go to great lengths to arrive
at pricing for their three most-common policy categories -- standard,
preferred and super-preferred -- to insure that their income exceeds
their payouts. Those rates are based partly on mortality rates,
partly on company experience and partly on practical knowledge about
our ever-changing habits and lifestyles.
By their very nature, life insurance rates reflect
the life expectancy of Joe and Jane Average, not Triple-X.
Extreme sports such as bungee jumping are extremely
hard to handicap, according to ACLI spokesman Jack Dolan.
"When bungee jumping came out, at first companies
were not writing (insuring) it. Then, when they started writing
it, the price was all over the map," he says. "That's
what happens with newer sports that pose threats. When a company
starts developing a history with it, they are able to start pricing
better."
The very novelty that gives you the adrenaline rush
gives your life insurer a peptic ulcer.
"The easiest thing to bet on is something that
is sure to happen: I know you're going to die, I know how much to
charge, no problem," says Carroll. "It's when I don't
know, when you become different from the average group and I don't
know how different. And then I run into the other problem that you
know more about yourself than I do, and that tilts the equation."
To cover their risk for your risky pastime, life insurers
tack on what's called a "flat extra," essentially an additional
premium on top of your life insurance policy. If you regularly participate
in mountain climbing, hang gliding, bungee jumping, helicopter skiing,
sky diving, motorcycle or auto racing, big-wave surfing, deep-sea
diving or flying, chances are you'll fall into this substandard
or "rated" category of folks who face a greater likelihood
of early expiration.
What's the bill for your thrills? Typically, if your
standard policy costs $2 per $1,000 of coverage, your flat extra
would run on average an additional $2.50 per $1,000, bringing your
insurance premium to $4.50 per $1,000.
"It can be pretty significant," says Joe
Perry, vice president, insurance products and sales for Countrywide
Insurance. "Depending on the age of the borrower, on average
it doubles your rate, and as you get older, because age is a primary
factor in life insurance, it can go as high as tripling your rate."
About now, you may be thinking, "Hey, a little
skydiving is hardly worth mentioning on this life insurance application,
right?" Wrong.
While insurers won't likely raise an eyebrow about
the random scuba dive on vacation or a bungee jump on your birthday,
if you do anything extreme on a regular basis and don't fess up,
they can refuse to pay up when your number is up.
What would Johnny do?
So what would "Jackass" star Johnny Knoxville do?
Try to negotiate a better rate, for starters.
Perry says that while most insurance companies are
willing to negotiate their own policy rates, they generally farm
out their high-risk policies to large corporate reinsurers. The
good news is that without these corporations, insurers might not
cover your hair-raising adventures at all; the bad news is, reinsure
rates are generally inflexible.
Another option is to pursue a policy that specifically
excludes your risky endeavor. State laws vary on which exclusions
are permissible, so a national insurer with access to many carriers
might be your best one-stop source. Advantage: You would pay no
flat extras above the cost of your policy. Disadvantage: If you
perish while engaged in the excluded activity, your beneficiaries
would receive nothing.
"I think our most common experience is probably
with pilots," says Perry. "Right now, it's running about
50-50. Half will exclude that, the other half will pay the extra
premium."
If you're hesitant to risk the financial well-being
of your beneficiaries on your knack with a hang glider, there is
another option that can literally save the ranch: a mortgage-life
policy. Mortgage life is a group policy that pays off your home
if you buy the farm.
Because it's a group policy, its pricing structure
is level, meaning the couch potatoes in your group offset you daredevils.
Perry estimates a pilot could save 25 percent to 30 percent by choosing
mortgage life over a rated policy.
The disadvantages are that coverage is limited to
the face amount of your mortgage at the time of application, and
the mortgage company is the sole beneficiary. And to qualify, you'll
need a mortgage, of course.
Still, if you can't afford the high premiums of a
rated policy, a mortgage-life policy that would leave your family
a house paid in full is not a bad second option.
Carroll says there are a few additional things you
can do to cause insurers to look more favorably upon your pastime.
"The best way to mitigate your rate? Go to school,
get a license, do all the safety things that you're supposed to
be doing and present yourself as someone who knows how to do whatever
this unusual thing is that you're doing."
Perry adds that should you decide to settle down and
leave the death-defying feats to others, be sure to notify your
life insurance agent.
"You can eliminate the flat extra just by giving
up the activity," he says. "A lot of people give up smoking
and don't tell their insurance company about it. That can reduce
their premiums dramatically."
Jay MacDonald is a contributing
editor based in Florida.
-- Updated: Aug. 5, 2003
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