You sold life insurance? Well then of course you're going to say term sucks.
Actually the commission on term is
much larger than whole or UL, so your implication really doesn't work here.
On a universal or a whole life policy you're paying a whole bunch more money into the plan to build a "cash value." You're going to get a horrible rate of return and won't have any control over what that extra money is invested in. The actual "insurance" part of it is the same as any other insurance.
You obviously lack the understanding of over-funding a smaller face value on a UL policy.
In term life, your premiums are dirt cheap and the insurance is the same as universal or whole life. You die, your family gets money. That's all insurance needs to do. Take your extra money and invest it yourself.
Until the term runs out. Then you paid all of that money for nothin. Well done.
Edit: I also forgot to mention - what actually gets paid out upon death in whole and universal? The face value of the policy or face value + "cash value?"
Depends on what you do with the dividends. Paid up additions? Pay on the policy? Write you a big fat check? What do you want to do with them?
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I forgot to mention...
A UL is only worthwhile if you're going to buy a smaller face value policy and over fund it. If you're going to pay for a policy you can afford, you might as well get the whole life...you'll get the same thing out of it. You really need to over fund it to get any benefit. Make the money work for you. After your "bucket" is over-flowing, you can increase the face value or stash the cash and have it paid out as a death benefit...or take it back out as a loan (that you may not have to pay back - think College).
Term is great...until you die the day/week/month after the term is up. That's where we saw most of our pissed off customers. They understood when Grandma only got a $2500 policy and all they were getting is $2500 (even though the cost of a funeral is up around $10k now). When they were pissed is when they had been paying on a policy, the term expired and then someone died...they'd come in and we'd have nothing for them. They knew what they wanted when they got the policy, but they wanted something else when it came time to cash-out.
Saw lots of that.
Do yourself a favor. Get a UL and over-fund it. We started off paying $300/month (for both of us) on our UL policies. We're still paying $300/mo, but our monthly premium is now under $80 to "sustain" it. We're over-funding it so we can sit back and relax while our money works for us. UL can be a very good investment if you do it right.
One more piece of advice. Make sure your wife owns the policy on your life and vice versa...or maybe the kids should own it. Either way, make sure YOU don't own it. You don't want your loved ones to pay the estate taxes on the money. It's not
income taxable...but they'll want their cut if they can get it (which they can if
you own your own policy).
Of course, I haven't sold insurance for 2 years and you really need to consult with a licensed insurance professional in your state for more details on how the policies work. Don't walk, run from anyone that says "buy term and invest the rest". The commission on term is huge and that's all they want.
-mini