Roughly 1,000 life insurance companies sell life insurance in
the U.S., but many are members of groups of companies and so aren’t
really competitors with each other. Having separate companies
enables a group to offer its products through separate distribution
channels, to more efficiently meet the regulatory requirements
of particular states, or to achieve other organizational goals.
There are an estimated three hundred company groups.
Moreover, not every group has a company licensed to operate in
each state. As a general rule, you should buy from a company licensed
in your state, because then can you rely on your state insurance
department to help if there’s a problem. And if the insurance
company becomes insolvent, your state’s life insurance guaranty
fund will help only policyholders of companies it has licensed.
To find out which companies are licensed in any state, contact
that state’s state insurance department.
There are several other points to keep in mind when selecting
a life insurance company:
1. Product – most, but not all, companies
offer a broad range of policies and features, so choose a company
that offers the product and features that meet your needs.
2. Identity – life insurance company names
can be confusing, and different companies can have similar names.
Life insurance company names often use words that suggest financial
strength (such as Guaranty, Reserve, or Security), financial sophistication
(such as Bankers, Financial, or Investors), maturity (such as
First, Pioneer, or Old), dependability (such as Assurance, Reliable,
Trust), fairness (such as Beneficial, Equitable, or Peoples),
breadth of operations (such as Continental, National, or International),
government (such as American, Capital, or Republic), or well-known
and respected Americans (such as Jefferson, Franklin, or Lincoln).
Be sure you know the full name, home office location, and affiliation
(if any) of any company you are considering (for an example, click
here).
3. Financial Solidity – life insurance
is a long-term arrangement. There is no guarantee for life insurance
policyholders similar to that provided for bank accounts by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Select a company
that is likely to be financially sound for many years, by using
ratings from independent rating agencies.
4. Market ethics – some life insurance
companies subscribe to the principles and codes of conduct of
the Insurance Marketplace
Standards Association, a nonprofit organization that promotes
ethical conduct in life insurance marketing.
5. Advice and service – for many people,
life insurance is a strange, complex product, so that it helps
to deal with a representative with whom you can communicate and
who is attentive to your needs. This might be connected to the
selection of a life insurance company because some agents represent
only one or a very few life insurance companies. See How
do I select a life insurance agent?
6. Claims – you may want to check a national
claims database to see what complaint information it has on a
company. Also, your state insurance department will be able to
tell you if the insurance company you are considering doing business
with had many consumer complaints about its service relative to
the number of policies it sold.
7. Premium and cost – The premium is the
amount you pay the company for the life insurance contract with
all of its benefits. Even for a given death benefit and type of
insurance (e.g., term life), the premium can vary widely among
companies, either because some companies’ policies have
features that others don’t, or because some charge more
than others for the same coverage. So the first step in comparing
policies is to make sure you compare similar insurance plans,
based on
-Your age
-The type of policy and policy features
-The amount of insurance you are purchasing
The premium for the policy isn’t the same as the cost of
the protection portion of the policy. One policy might have a
higher premium but also offer more benefits (for example, it might
pay policy dividends) than another. Or both might promise dividends,
but in different amounts at different points in time. In each
case, the higher-premium policy might have a lower cost of protection.
How can you tell what a policy’s cost is? Companies should
tell you a policy’s Net Payment Cost Index and its Surrender
Cost Index. Use the Surrender Cost Index if you’re thinking
of keeping the insurance only for a specific period of time; use
the Net Payment Cost Index if you expect to keep the policy indefinitely.
Generally, the lower the cost index, the better.
Article Source: Insurance
Information Institute