Do retirees really need to pay for life insurance?
Do retirees really need to pay for life insurance?

You're retired. Your kids are self-sufficient and the house is paid off. There's no need to continue carrying life insurance, right?

For the most part, that's correct, said Bob Adams, a certified financial planner with Armstrong Retirement Planning. Life insurance is intended to replace lost income if the policyholder dies prematurely, he explained. If you're no longer working, there's no income to replace.

Before you let your policy lapse, however, it's important to consider your unique financial picture. There are plenty of exceptions for which continuing to pay those premiums into your 60s and beyond might make sense.

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"When I sit down with new retirees, we look at whether they need life insurance at all and how much their policy costs," he said, explaining that many people don't understand that their premiums may rise.

"We also look at whether they might be able to achieve what they want with a cheaper policy," he said. "You never want to cancel life insurance without analyzing those questions, because you can't usually recover your policy at the same rate again."

Indeed, premiums for life insurance coverage vary widely depending upon the type of policy you own.

Term life policies, the least expensive option, provide coverage for a specified duration, usually 10 to 30 years. A death benefit is paid to your heirs only if you die before the term expires. There is no savings component.

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Term life insurance can be purchased with either a level (fixed) or rising premium. Make sure you know what you're buying.

"Your rates can go up like a hockey stick," Adams said. "Most people don't understand what they sign up for and end up paying premiums for years, only to dump it when their rate gets too high."

He added, "The insurance companies laugh all the way to the bank because they collected all those years and never had to pay out a death benefit."

The other category of life insurance products is referred to as cash value, or permanent life. Such policies also pay out a death benefit to your heirs when you die, but they are far more expensive than term life.

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That's because, as the name implies, cash-value life insurance policies accumulate value over the policyholder's lifetime. Types of cash-value policies include whole life, universal life and variable life.

For most retirees, Adams recommends a guaranteed level-premium term life policy, in which the premiums remain constant, with just enough death benefit to cover a specific need.