“How much life insurance do I need?” is
a question we are asked often. Just about everyone needs life insurance.
Unfortunately many go without and many more don’t have enough. You need life
insurance if someone else will be affected financially by your death. There are
multiple formulas for figuring out how much to buy. By doing a little research
someone may get inundated and frustrated with information and tools to use when
trying to figure out how much life insurance to purchase. There are multiple
life insurance calculators and broker questionnaires that take into account
debt, college for kids, cost of living increases, among others.
In addition to protecting those you
love, certain kinds of life insurance are bought as an investment tool.
Typically individual life insurance is purchased with after tax dollars
therefore money you received from the policy is done so tax free.
There are many types of life insurance.
There’s Term Life, Whole Life, Universal Life, Indexed Universal Life, Final
Expense Insurance, and more. They all are bought for different reasons but they
all do the same (single) thing. They protect your dependents from losing the
income you generate.
A good place to start and a simple way
to calculate how much you’re worth is by looking at how much you make. You start
with how much money you earn annually and multiply that by how many years you
have left to work. Let’s say you’re 50 years old, you make $50,000 per year and
you plan to retire at 65. The death benefit of your life insurance policy
should be at least $750,000. Your “monetary” value to the people that depend on
your income is what you are insuring. Simply put… By purchasing life insurance
you are replacing your ability to generate income if you aren’t around anymore.
It’s very important to protect the
security your dependents have by way of your income. Imagine you have a machine
in a room of your house that prints money and it prints $50,000 per year. You
would surely lock it up to keep it safe, clean it and oil its parts. You would
do your best to make sure no harm comes to it. You may even go so far as to buy
a warranty to insure this machine in the event of a malfunction or needing a
replacement.
With all the preventive measures you
take to keep that machine going you certainly wouldn’t want it getting
seriously sick into a car and driving to work every day on the Maine winter
roads. You probably wouldn’t be eager to let it climb a ladder to do some roof
repair or go boating on Sebago. But if you did have to let this money making
machine go do all these things you would look to find a way to protect the
income that machine makes for you year after year. You have a lifestyle, bills
to pay and future plans that depend on the income your machine generates.
You too are a money making machine and
if others depend on that income to pay the bills and continue with the plans
that were made there’s an easy way to protect them.