boredboiboi
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Male, non smoker, early 40s
I think u can just stick to the plan.
Male, non smoker, early 40s
Which insurer? Disability income insurance standalone available for aviva, aia and ge
I think u can just stick to the plan.
Means continue with my plan ?
I thought so cos I would think that the policies in the market are all the same more or less
Prudential
The Disability income is it term policy ? no cash value?
Premium payment is 15 years. The cost is due to my age. I believe in getting money back if nothing happens.
Nope because i gave up as u dont want to give full info to even help u accordingly.
Early 40s can be 40-45.
What is the coverage, without exact info, cant even help u to generate to see if there are better ones. And is there any multiplier, if there is then till what age etc.
If you believe in getting your money back if nothing happens then most definitely you should be looking at a product with cash value. At the end of the day, you opt-ed in for the plan and if you feel that there are better alternatives that suit both your needs as well as your personal requirement, by all means![]()
But you have to know exactly why you are getting the insurance for since you mentioned that you may not have dependents then i assumed you are more concerned about critical illnesses whereby you might not have passed on but in dire need of financial support/payout.
Until and unless there is more details regarding your objective of your existing portfolio as well as your details, its hard to say if any other company out there can match your needs and wants accordingly!
For Disability Income Insurance, it is not a must to only be a rider. There are companies that are doing it as a standalone product![]()
Coverage is 250k. Until age 70 the amount starts to drop. Then it increases again a few years later (why?)
Yes it's a Prulife Multiplier flex plan. So there is multiplier (although I dunno what it really means).
After some talking to an agent, I bought a whole life plan about a year ago from Prudential 450p/mnth covers Death, TPD and CI. It is costly because I bought it quite late. As I have no dependants, I'm beginning to wonder if I bought the wrong product. After consulting my agent, the company actually has a CI only plan but it has no cash value. I always feel that a plan with cash value would be more worth it cos you will get something back in the end if nothing happens.
I also bought a hospitalization plan (aka Integrated shield) as well from them. This has no cash value as well.
To be honest, the possibility of disability (as defined by them as unable to perform 3 out of the 6 activities) is very rare in reality, if I'm not wrong. This is partly why I'm not so keen on this part of insurance.
Just curious, what is the premium payment in the market for this Disability insurance ? for a term of say until 70 yrs old.
There is nothing shocking. This has always been the way the illustration is being prepared.I just discovered something extremely shocking ! It was confirmed by my agent.
The surrender value table is not accurate !
The column "total amount of premiums paid" does not take into account the premiums paid by my CI rider. It only takes into account the premiums paid by the main policy (death and TPD), hence the amounts are all not accurate !
Please take a look at your surrender value tables (any other tables).
So you really should work out first what your expenditure will be like if you get hit by CI. Then you will know how much protection you need. Then work out what plans you need to buy.
There is nothing shocking. This has always been the way the illustration is being prepared.
You need to read thru and understand each and every word in the presales benefit illustrations, policy schedule, policy conditions and all other documents presented.
May I ask how much is the expenditure if one is hit by CI ?
To be honest, the possibility of disability (as defined by them as unable to perform 3 out of the 6 activities) is very rare in reality, if I'm not wrong. This is partly why I'm not so keen on this part of insurance.
Just curious, what is the premium payment in the market for this Disability insurance ? for a term of say until 70 yrs old.
Assuming your health insurance will pay everything, then you're fine in terms of medical bills.
So the question is cost of living.
DII can be structured for you to claim up to 75% of your income, so if you get DII and you spend less than 75% of your income, your COL is covered as well.
Otherwise, if you google, I think you can find that the recommendation is 1yr of expenditure for eCI and 5 years for CI. Why this is so, I don't know.
Isn't that extremely misleading?? And the rationale is ?
Understand each and every word of that 100 plus pages document? Yes I agree with you but I dun think most people could.
What is eCI ?
My main concern is actually medical bills.