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eLearning Series:
Your Most Popular Insurance Questions
Answers For Health and Home
Insurance
( 50 articles
in this series )
Funeral & Burial
Insurance:
What You Need To Know
Most people hate either contemplating or talking
about their own death or burial and try to avoid both subjects
whenever possible, perhaps they want to believe it will never
happen to them. The reality, however, is that everyone dies
and if you don’t plan ahead for the inevitable costs
associated with a funeral and burial, your survivors could
be left with
a mountain of bills that they cannot afford to pay. All other
members of your family should be included in any burial plan
or should have policies of their own.
When considering the need for burial insurance, the first
thing you should do is determine the costs currently
associated with a funeral and burial. Even if you have a burial plan,
the benefit amount may not be sufficient (especially if the
policy is an old one) to cover the actual costs. After you
determine the estimated funeral and burial costs, you can start
looking for a burial insurance plan that best suits your needs.
A reputable insurance agent will be able to point you in the
right direction.
Look at the Numbers
You won’t know what kind of burial insurance plan you need
– or if the one you have is sufficient - until you estimate
the costs of a funeral and burial. This will take a bit of
time and research, but the effort will definitely be worth
it. The items you must include in this estimate are: medical
bills not covered by insurance, debts, cemetery plot, casket,
vault, headstone, funeral service and viewing, floral arrangements,
limousine service, minister’s fees, body preparation fees,
and other miscellaneous expenses. A funeral home could give
you a rough estimate of most of these costs.
Estimating the costs associated with a funeral and burial
accomplishes two things: it allows you to choose an adequate
burial plan and gives you an idea of the bill you or your survivors
could be stuck with.
Do You Need a Burial Plan?
Before you begin shopping for a burial insurance plan, make
sure that you really need one. Go through all of your existing
policies and check for burial coverage. If you have insurance
through your place of employment, burial costs may
already be covered. If you find that you are not covered through your
workplace, see if your employer offers such a plan and whether
or not you are eligible to participate– premiums paid through
an employer can be a lot lower than those paid through an independent
plan. If you or a loved one is a veteran of the U.S. Military,
then a funeral, burial plot and other miscellaneous expenses
are most likely part of your veteran’s benefits.
If you have a current burial insurance policy, compare the
benefit to the current estimated costs. Funeral costs increase
every year and your current plan (especially if it’s an old
one) may not pay enough to cover everything. If this is the
case, consider modifying your current policy or getting an
additional one.
Buying Burial Insurance
Once you’ve decided to buy a burial insurance plan, do a lot
of shopping around and make sure that the plan you choose fits
your needs. You’ll want a policy that will cover all
funeral and burial expenses and one that takes into account
the increasing
associated costs as well. For example, if you’ve used today’s
prices to calculate that the cost of your funeral and burial
would be $10,000, a policy with a benefit in that amount will
probably not cover the same expenses 10 or 15 years from now.
You will need to make an educated guess as to the future cost
or purchase a plan that takes these ever-increasing numbers
into account.
The burial insurance plan that you choose may simply require
that you send in an application through the mail. If you are
relatively young and have no major medical problems, then the
premiums should be low and qualifying for the policy won’t
be a problem. If, on the other hand, you have been diagnosed
with any major or terminal illnesses, have recently been hospitalized,
had an organ transplant or been denied insurance in the past
6 months, you will not qualify.
An alternative to the traditional burial plan is something
called “pre-need” insurance. This type of burial plan allows
you to prepay for your burial expenses at current prices. It
also lets you plan all aspects of the funeral, from the music
played and passages read to the clothing you’ll be buried in.
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by SolveYourProblem.com : 2005
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