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Subject:
Whole Life Insurance
Category: Business and Money Asked by: brentwill1-ga List Price: $50.00 |
Posted:
13 Jan 2006 15:55 PST
Expires: 12 Feb 2006 15:55 PST Question ID: 433098 |
I am a 25 year old male in very good health. I also have around 130K invested and should gain about 3 million from inheritance. I am interested in starting a whole life insurance policy to protect these assets when I die from taxes. I would like to buy into the policy now, when the premiums will be cheap and I want to guarantee that the premiums will remain the same price throughout my life. I also want a plan that allows for options to buy more insurance at the same pro-rated amount. I would like to start with the minimum about of coverage possible and end up with about 1 million dollars of insurance when I am 50. I have found one plan at liberty national insurance (http://www.libnat.com/) that allows this, in a way. It gives me 138K of insurance now, and gives me eight options through the years to increase the coverage by 50K every 3 years, which would give me 538K of insurance by age 49. The premiums for me would be 77 dollars a month and I would buy the extra insurance at the same price. I would like to know, is this best price? What options do other insurance companies offer and how do they compare? | |
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Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
Answered By: hedgie-ga on 12 Feb 2006 01:25 PST Rated: |
brentwill1-ga I apologize for not following up,right away, to answer your modified question. I hoped someone else will pick up this question, but since no one did, this is my answer: You do not need a full time personal money manager. There is a professional advice available, from financial or estate planner, for a hourly fee, of some $100 to $200 per hour. You still need to know enough, to select the 'right adviser'. Here is an advice of one seasoned professional: Page 'whom can you trust?' gives a sage advice You Never "Buy" Stocks from a Stockbroker You Never "Buy" Insurance from an Insurance Agent You Never "do" Financial Planing with a Financial Planner http://www.efmoody.com/index.html Moody's site is still one of the best on the net, even though it looks like plasterd an ad for his book an every page. I say 'seems' since I did not inspected all 3000 of them. It is imperative for a consumer to understand the difference between load and 'no load' funds and fee-for-service and 'free advice planners'. I suppose you do know these basics, things like: "Is there really that much of a worthwhile difference between load and no-load funds? An analogy to comparing mutual fund structures would be a one-hundred yard race. If the race competitors have equal ability, but one has a five to six yard head start, you obviously know who would win the contest." http://biz.yahoo.com/edu/mf/ir_mf2.ir.html and 'about for fee advisors' National Association of Personal Financial Advisors (NAPFA) NAPFA (National Association of Personal Financial Advisors) is the professional association of fee-only financial advisors. Find planners near you and other ... http://www.napfa.org/ No Load Insurance, Financial Planning No & Low Load Insurance, Financial Planning, Fee Only Financial Advisor, Universal Life & Variable Life Insurance, Retirement Planning, ... http://www.feeplannersnetwork.com/ - 17k - Cached - Similar pages If not, consider subscribing to Kiplinger's Personal Finance is a magazine that has been continuously published, on a monthly basis, from 1947 to the present day. It was the the nation's first personal finance magazine, and prides itself on delivering "sound, unbiased advice in clear, concise language". It offers tips and tricks on managing money and achieving financial security, as well as information and practical guidance on saving, investing, planning for retirement, paying for college, and buying automobiles, homes and other major purchases. http://www.kiplinger.com/personalfinance/ http://www.zinio.com/express?issue=125221288 http://www.kiplinger.com/ http://www.valuemags.com/home/details.asp?MagID=609 and membership in AAII: The American Association of Individual Investors provides investment education for the individual investor. AAII arms the individual investor with ... http://www.aaii.com/ or in "BetterInvesting has helped over five million investors take control of their financial futures. That's because we're dedicated to providing a sound program of investment education and support to help our members become successful lifetime investors..." http://www.betterinvesting.org/ We, here at GA, do not providw financial or other professional advice (please read the disclaimer at the bottom of the page) but we can suggest professions and publications which deal with issues relevant to askers question. SEARCH TERMS: estate tax, trust (when entered into a search engine) will bring many sites, many provided by professionals, which describe issues and services, sites like: Will You Owe Estate Taxes? (Tax Guide: Personal Finance ... Note 1: You can avoid estate tax on life insurance proceeds by setting up an irrevocable life insurance trust to own the policies on your life. ... http://www.smartmoney.com/tax/ homefamily/index.cfm?story=estatetax Tax Law Changes for Gifts and Estates and Trusts 2006 Federal Tax Rates for Estates and Trusts. The 2006 federal estate and trust tax rates are as follows. 2006 Federal Estate and Trust Tax Rates ... http://www.irs.gov/formspubs/article/0,,id=112782,00.html Federal Estate Taxes - Bypass Trust - Credit Shelter As such, when our husband dies, the first $2 million that is left in trust escapes federal estate taxes because it is below his $2 million credit. http://www.estateattorney.com/basicfet.htm FCIC: Establishing a Trust Fund A bypass trust allows a married couple, in certain cases, to shelter more of their estate from estate taxes. The first spouse to die can leave assets in a Wills & Estate Planning - Resource Center Make your own legal will, living trust, healthcare directive (living will), and powers of attorney. Avoid probate and estate taxes. http://www.nolo.com/resource.cfm/catID/ FD1795A9-8049-422C-9087838F86A2BC2B/309/ Please, feel free to ask for clarifications, and when all is clear, please do rate the answer. We want to know if our search was useful to the customer. Hedgie |
brentwill1-ga
rated this answer:
Very indepth |
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Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
From: canadianhelper-ga on 13 Jan 2006 16:07 PST |
Google Researchers are not allowed to answer your question 'how do they compare'...they can provide you with links to the info and links to other peoples opinions but they are not going to be able to provide you with 'their' opinion, for instance. Also, without access to industry exclusive info they can't answer whether something is the 'best' price...they can't find what isn't on the net. Hopefully a summary of options and a listing of their prices is going to be sufficient. I would rather (as someone in the financial services industry) see you personally visit a few financial planners with reputable firms that either have access to or are licensed to talk about insurance and estates. Their time should be free and likely much more informative. My 2 cents on this one but if you have a 3million $ estate coming down the pike I wouldn't be goofing around with amateurs. Google Answers researchers are generally NOT experts and should not be relied on as such... See Answers FAQ: Do you answer medical, financial, or legal questions? We will provide background information and links to other sources for questions of a professional nature, but Google Answers is not a substitute for professional advice and counsel. If you have a question of this nature, we strongly recommend you consult a professional. Who will answer my question? Your question will be answered by a Researcher. Google Answers Researchers are experts at locating hard-to-find information on the web, and through offline resources as well. Your question may also receive comments from other registered users who can volunteer suggestions and advice at no additional charge to you. Researchers must go through an application process that tests their research skills and the quality of their answers. Google also spot-checks their answers once they've been approved. If a Google editor sees a problem with an answer, that answer will be pulled and your question will be put back into the system. You are strongly encouraged to provide feedback on the quality of the response you receive by ranking the answer returned by the Researcher. If the Researcher's rating falls below a certain level or the Researcher has several returned questions, he or she will no longer be allowed to respond to questions as part of the Google Answers service. |
Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
From: brentwill1-ga on 13 Jan 2006 16:54 PST |
I would love to go to an expert, but my current assets means I don't think it would be worthwhile for me to get a full time money manager at this point. I have all my current assets with dodge and cox and I am rather satisfied with the rate at which my money is growing. However, I know this money is comming at some point and I want to protect myself while I can still do it cheaply and I don't want to pay the rate I would pay for a money manager. Anyway, my thought was with 130K invested and that being my total net worth, does it really make sense for me to get an advisor? |
Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
From: canadianhelper-ga on 13 Jan 2006 18:15 PST |
Now that's a question that I hope you can get an answer on! Why not cancel this one and start a new one (without spending $200)... I'm in Canada so I can't advise you on costs but generally between 150k and 300k is when the straight cost of advisors and fees is cheaper than say mutual fund fees (assuming equal return rates) here in Canada but I'm sure it's quite different there. For instance...your funds are costing you approx .6% Expense Ratios... Up here in Canada it is quite common to get full management, all in, including tax prep, invest management etc for about 3000$ to 5000$ per year. Mutual funds sold by the banks will charge between .5 and 3% Expense Ratios...so depending on how much money you have the full management becomes more and more attractive... I'll bow out to a local Answerer! Good Luck. |
Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
From: myoarin-ga on 13 Jan 2006 20:23 PST |
This is just a comment, no financial or tax advice. If you are young and healthy and assured of such an inheritance, you don't need life insurance. If you don't want to manage the money when the inheritance comes to you, talk to professionals about investment, annuity possibilities. It is appropriate for you to consider the eventualities, but insurance companies are generally not the best place to put your funds, unless you need the security of the company's paying off a mortgage or providing for survivers. |
Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
From: brentwill1-ga on 14 Jan 2006 06:28 PST |
Actually, you do need it. When I die, the government will take about 40 percent of my net value over 100K. (The death tax). Life insurance offsets this. |
Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
From: daniel2d-ga on 14 Jan 2006 12:16 PST |
You need to go to an estate planner to figure out how to arrange your assests to met your goals. A trust or trusts, set up in various ways will probably achieve this purpose. Insurance is only a part of the equation. For example, real estate that pawwes to another at your death will be inheried at the stepped up basis (the currene value at death not the original purchase price). You can give tax free gifts over your lifetime (up to a maximum)to people you want. You can purchase term insurance, rather than whole lfe. You really need an estate planner rather than a life insurance salesperson to advise you. Plus, start reading up on your own. |
Subject:
Re: Whole Life Insurance
From: scubajim-ga on 18 Jan 2006 09:13 PST |
Get someone versed in estate law. If you buy the insurance you might be making the problem worse. If you (check with estate lawyer) have an irrevocable trust own the insurance policy then the insurance amount won't be included in the estate and hence the cash can be used to pay the inheritance tax. Also in the US the estate tax has a large offset before taxes kick in. (I think about $700,000 before amounts over that start getting taxed, but it varies from year to year due to recent tax law changes.) Get an experienced estate lawyer. |
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