Should You Buy Life Insurance for Your Parents?
Mark Sweeney
Longevity Wealth Specialist | Tailored Strategies for a Lifetime of Wealth | Empowering Financial Resilience
Key takeaways
Asking aging parents about their finances—especially life insurance and final expenses—can feel uncomfortable. But it's a conversation worth having, as they might need your help preparing for the future. As an adult child, you can buy life insurance to help your parents achieve important financial goals. Here's what to consider.
Why you should consider life insurance for your parents
One reason to buy life insurance is to cover "final expenses." Funeral costs?can easily top $10,000. Yet your parents could also die with significant medical bills, outstanding debt and legal fees to process their wills and estates.
If your parents don't have the money to cover these costs, they could fall on you and your other family members. Life insurance could be the solution.
Moreover, life insurance can cover goals like leaving an inheritance to charity, helping adult children buy a home, or funding college for grandkids.
Then too, life insurance can help support your parents in retirement. Say your father receives money from a pension, and your mother depends on that income. If your father dies first, that income stream could stop, depending on the pension's rules. The insurance policy's death benefit would help provide for your mother.
Similarly, your policy could include "living benefits." These benefits pay out some or all of the death benefit while your parents are still alive, to help cover medical bills if they become seriously ill. (To do so, you—or they—would need to purchase a special rider along with the policy.) You could also set up the policy to pay part of the death benefit if your parents need long-term care in a nursing home or other facility.
?Rules and eligibility for life insurance
To buy life insurance for someone else, you need "insurable interest." In other words, you must show that you would be financially impacted by the person's death. Children automatically meet this definition for their parents.
However, you'll need their permission first: They'll have to sign the application to show they approve. So before getting too far into the process, talk with your parents to ensure they're on board with your plan.
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As part of your discussion, decide who will be in charge of paying the insurance premiums. (If your parents want to do so, first make sure they'll have enough financial resources to cover those costs. If they stop paying at some point, they could lose their life insurance coverage.)
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Types of life insurance for parents
As you consider life insurance for your parents, you'll need to decide what type of coverage to buy. There are three main categories:
To help your parents choose—particularly among a wide range of permanent policy types with differing features and benefits—consider the pros and cons of life insurance for seniors. You’ll also want to think about how much coverage they need. This will depend on what they need the policy to cover.
?How to apply
If you and your parents agree on a policy(ies), you can formally apply through the insurance company you choose. (Both of you will need to sign the application.) From there, your parents may need to go through "medical underwriting." During this process, the insurer could ask them health questions and check their medical records. They may also ask them to submit blood and urine for testing and have them meet with a nurse or doctor for a physical
The insurance company will then decide if your parents qualify for coverage—and how much it will cost. Then you can decide whether to accept the offer, pay the first premium and start their protection.
?What you can do next
Talk to your parents about their needs, then give me a call to determine the right amount of coverage for your parents' situation, and to discuss your options. Start the application process as soon as you're ready; the younger and healthier your parents are when they apply, the better their chances of qualifying, and the less they're likely to pay for the coverage they need.