For the Best Life Insurance for Veterans: Shop EARLY
If you’re military, you probably know all about Servicemember
Group Life Insurance, or SGLI. It’s provided coverage for you and your family
for your whole career.
However, transitioning out of the military presents new life
insurance options worth exploring. You can go with a Veteran Group Life
Insurance policy (VGLI); life insurance through a military association such as
American Forces Mutual Aid Association (AFMAA); or opt for private life
insurance like term life or whole life.
Either way, the best piece of advice any life insurance
professional can give a retiring servicemember is this: get quotes early.
You have 120 days from discharge to choose the best life
insurance option for you and your family. You can stick with government group
insurance or go private with term or permanent life insurance from a commercial
life insurance company. But perform
your due diligence to determine which will serve you best going forward. And if
you’re leaning toward private, keep in mind that it takes between four to six
weeks to go through the private life insurance underwriting process.
Online life
insurance quotes are easy to get and provide automatic side-by-side
comparisons to give you a bird’s-eye view of the marketplace and what you can
expect to pay.
Term Life Insurance
for Veterans
Term Life
insurance is the most affordable commercial life insurance with the most
coverage.
It’s set up for a set amount of time with a set amount of
coverage at a set premium payment. For example, if you are a healthy
40-year-old male, you can expect to pay around $49 per month for a 30-year
$500,000 policy. Your rate does not change.
A similar VGLI policy would cost the same 40-year-old more
than $80 per month, renewable every five years with a rate increase. Also, you
wouldn’t be able to purchase $500,000 worth of coverage with government life
insurance. VGLI coverage caps at $400,000.
Term life is ideal for young families with dependents as it
provides a financial safety net when you need it most. And as your family,
income and needs grow, you can convert to a permanent policy with cash value
without submitting to a medical exam.
Term life insurance does require underwriting, which means a
medical exam and labs. So, if you’re retiring with a service-related injury,
you probably won’t be able to qualify for term life or will pay much higher
premiums than you would through government-sponsored insurance.
Permanent Life
Insurance for Veterans
Permanent
life insurance is a bit more expensive than term life but generates cash
value you can use in a variety of ways—to borrow against or to pay your
premiums, for example. Whole life is a type of permanent insurance.
If you decide to go with VGLI when you retire, you can later
convert to a private whole life
insurance policy. Unfortunately, you cannot do so with term life.
Combination Private
and Military Life Insurance
But you can purchase additional term life coverage to
supplement a VGLI policy. Experts recommend families obtain coverage for
between 10- and 15-times annual income. So the $400,000 coverage cap VGLI
offers probably is not enough to protect your family should they lose your income
if you pass unexpectedly.
If you’re in reasonably good health, you can purchase a
supplemental term life policy for an additional $250,000 for as little as $28
per month.
No matter which life insurance you go with, remember that
it’s vital that you start shopping around for the best insurance quotes online as early as
possible.
Those 120 days will go fast.
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