“Burial insurance” usually refers to a whole life
insurance policy with a death benefit of from $5,000 to $25,000.
As its nickname implies, people buy this type of policy to provide
money for funeral and burial costs for themselves and/or family
members. It is possible to buy a policy after answering a few
health-related questions on the application and with no medical
exam.
Premiums are payable weekly or monthly. The premium is usually
collected at the policyowner’s home or workplace, and the
premium is usually a small round number, such as $2 or $3 per
week; the death benefit is whatever that premium will buy given
the insured’s current age. For example, a $3 per week premium
might buy a $6,000 death benefit for a 36-year-old man or an $18,000
death benefit for a 9-year-old boy.
Burial policies may be designed to cover one person or everyone
in a family.
Under some state laws, funeral homes may be licensed to sell
burial insurance, but it is mainly sold through brokers and agents
of insurance companies licensed to sell life insurance.
An approach that is similar to burial life insurance (and sometimes
called burial or “pre-need” insurance) is pre-payment
of your funeral arrangements. Under this program, you may select
the funeral home, type of service, casket (or cremation), flowers,
headstone, burial plot, the cost of digging and filling the grave,
and other items, and lock in the prices for them by paying in
advance.
Article Source: Insurance
Information Institute