When a life insurance policy lapses
While buying a life insurance policy make sure the policy meets your needs today
and also in the future. What might happen if you change your mind and plan to cancel
the policy. If you decide to cancel it after a few days you might still have the
option of canceling it. But if it is more than weeks, months, or years and then,
you realize you don't want the policy anymore. You are only left with the option
of lapsing it, i.e., you stop paying premiums.
Insurance companies might overlook one policy lapse but if you lapse policies
enough times, it could cause problems. A life insurance policy lapses or cancels
itself, when you stop paying premiums. If you have a permanent life insurance policy
that has accumulated cash value, the insurance company drains your cash value to
pay your premiums until it runs out after which the policy lapses. There are many
reasons why someone might lapse a policy. You might feel your premium is too high,
so you'll buy one at a better rate and lapse the old one. If you have variable life
insurance you might be unsatisfied with the amount of cash value you are accumulating.
Some insurance companies are negligent and might not even bother to ask about
your previous policy lapses on the application. But there are some and they will
actually review your history and decide on a case-by-case basis. If you failed to
pay premiums on several policies, you would likely be denied a new life insurance
policy. Some insurers might think you'll leave them for a better deal at the drop
of a hat. They might think you are financially strapped and have a hard time paying
your bills. Some might even suspect your involvement in a scam with your agent in
which you're getting a kickback on the agent's commission. The insurer holds the
right to call the policy null and void.
Innumerable lapses cost huge amount to the insurance companies because the commission
of the agents are paid as certain percentage of the first year’s premium. Approving
a new policy means paying another commission to an agent. Typically commissions
for the sale of life insurance policies can be more than 50 percent of the first
year's premium for term life insurance. Commissions can go even over 60 percent
for some whole life insurance policies. Agents also receive incentives depending
on the number of new policies they sell.
So typically you will be categorized as a bad risk which will affect your financial
history. In the future your any kind of transactions will be scrutinized carefully.
In conclusion, to avoid such circumstances and haphazard, it is advisable to inform
your insurer about your decision to cancel the policy. And more important, it is
better to understand the policies properly before you decide to buy them. This will
avoid all the other unwanted problems from arising.
Other articles on Life Insurance
- Life Insurance Overview
- What is life insurance?
- Why life insurance?
- Life insurance types?
- How much to insure?
- Factors affecting life insurance
- Life Insurance tips
- Ways to reduce the premium of Life insurance policy
- Life Insurance FAQs
- Life Insurance claims
- Life Insurance - Dos & Donts
- What to do when a claim is rejected
- Life insurance glossary
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