There are two main categories of life insurance:
Term life insurance is, as the name suggests, temporary. You may wish to be insured until retirement, or until your children are self-sufficient, or perhaps for the duration of a mortgage.
Most term policies are 10 and 20 years in length, although some carriers also offer 5, 15, 25 and 40 year terms.
Universal life is more flexible than whole life, and is a transparent version of Whole Life. The insurance company clearly separates the insurance and investment components. The client chooses from several different cost of insurance methods and many investment options. The premiums and death benefit are variable and can be adjusted according to the terms of the policy, which vary by carrier. In essence, there is a minimum premium and a maximum premium and you can choose to pay any amount between those two figures. Any excess above the minimum is used to invest in the many choices provided by the insurance carriers within the Universal Life policy on a tax deferred basis within the limits prescribed by the Income Tax Act.
Term 100 is permanant insurance that can be purchased for the duration of the life assured’s life without any cash value.
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