Last Updated on April 9, 2026 by teamtfl
“The first law of insurance: never buy a product your agent is excited to sell you.” – anonymous
A client came to me with his insurance portfolio a few years ago. Seven LIC policies. Total annual premium: Rs 2.8 lakh. Total life cover: Rs 42 lakh.
He was a 40-year-old with a home loan of Rs 60 lakh, two children in school, and a dependent wife. By any standard calculation, he needed at least Rs 1.5-2 crore in life cover. He had less than a third of that.
And he was spending Rs 2.8 lakh a year on it.
How? Every policy had been sold by a different relative or colleague. Seven policies. Seven agents. Seven commissions. And a family that would have been financially devastated if he had died before his children finished college.
⚡ Quick Answer
Most Indians are over-insured in premium and under-insured in cover. We buy endowment policies and money-back plans because agents sell them aggressively and family obligations make it difficult to say no. The result: high premiums, low cover, poor returns. The solution is simple: buy term insurance for pure protection (Rs 1-2 crore for Rs 10,000-15,000/year). Invest the difference separately. Never mix the two.

Why We Buy the Wrong Insurance
The moment someone mentions life insurance, what comes to mind? Most Indians have one or more of these reactions:
“I already have multiple LIC policies. That is enough.” Or: “My limit under 80C is done, so no more insurance this year.” Or: “How do I avoid my neighbour who became an LIC agent last month?” Or the most revealing one: “How much rebate will the agent give me from his commission?”
Not one of these thoughts is about the actual purpose of life insurance. Not one asks: “If I die tomorrow, will my family be financially okay?”
That is the psychology problem. Indians have been taught to see life insurance as a tax-saving instrument and a forced savings vehicle. Agents have reinforced this by selling endowment policies and money-back plans – products that combine insurance with investment, give the policyholder a “maturity amount,” and pay the agent a first-year commission of 25-35%.
What Life Insurance Is Actually For
Insurance is for eventuality, not certainty. It is most needed by people who have the longest distance to travel – young earners with dependent families, large liabilities, and limited accumulated assets.
Think about it this way. If a 65-year-old retiree dies, whose children are settled and earning, the financial impact on the family is limited. The social and emotional loss is enormous – but the family continues financially.
If a 34-year-old dies, leaving behind a spouse, two young children, a home loan of Rs 50L, and a plan to fund two college educations – the financial devastation is total. The family loses the income, the savings trajectory, and the ability to fund the goals they had planned.
Life insurance exists to bridge the gap between what you have built (disposable assets) and what your family needs (liabilities). When liabilities exceed disposable assets, you need insurance. When disposable assets exceed liabilities, you no longer need it.
Most 35-45 year olds are deep in the “need insurance” zone. Most of them are under-insured and do not know it.
The Hidden Cost of Endowment Policies
Here is the math that most agents hope you never calculate.
An endowment policy premium of Rs 50,000/year for a Rs 10L cover over 20 years. Total premium paid: Rs 10L. Maturity value: approximately Rs 16-18L (roughly 4-5% CAGR). Agent’s first-year commission: Rs 12,500-17,500.
Alternative: A Rs 1 crore term plan costs approximately Rs 10,000-14,000/year for a 35-year-old. Premium saved versus endowment: Rs 36,000-40,000/year. Invest that in a diversified equity mutual fund at 11% CAGR over 20 years: approximately Rs 2.5-3 crore.
The endowment policy gave you Rs 10L cover and Rs 16-18L maturity. The term + invest approach gives you Rs 1 crore cover AND Rs 2.5-3 crore corpus. Same money. Radically different outcome. According to IRDAI’s 2024 annual report, traditional plans (endowments, money-back) still account for over 60% of new life insurance premium in India – despite delivering returns that rarely beat inflation.
The purpose of life insurance is to protect your family. Not to save tax. Not to grow wealth.
At RetireWise, insurance review is part of every retirement plan. We show you what you actually need – and what you can let go. SEBI Registered. Fee-only.
Why We Cannot Say No to the Relative-Agent
The single biggest reason Indians buy bad life insurance is social obligation. The agent is not a stranger. It is your cousin who just got his LIC licence. Your bank relationship manager. Your father’s old friend. A colleague from office who is building his side income.
Behavioural economists call this the Pain of Paying combined with Social Norm pressure. The financial pain of buying a wrong policy (spread over 20 years in small annual premiums) feels abstract and distant. The social pain of refusing a known person – creating awkwardness, hurting the relationship, being labelled as “not helping” – feels immediate and real.
So we buy. And then we buy from the next relative. And the next. Seven policies later, we have a collection of endowment plans that collectively provide inadequate cover and mediocre returns, while seven people earned their commissions.
There is also the Denomination Effect: paying Rs 5,000/month as “investment-cum-insurance” feels like investing. Paying Rs 1,200/month for pure term insurance feels like an expense. The same money going toward actual investment somewhere else feels less real. This mental accounting keeps people locked in wrong products for decades.
How Much Life Insurance Do You Actually Need?
The simplest calculation: add up all your liabilities (home loan outstanding, children’s education costs, daughter’s marriage if applicable, dependent parents’ needs, spouse’s income replacement for 20 years). Subtract your existing disposable assets (mutual funds, FDs, EPF – not your house). The gap is how much life cover you need.
For most Indian executives aged 35-50 with a home loan, two dependents, and 15-20 years to retirement: the number is typically Rs 1-2 crore. A Rs 1 crore term plan for a 35-year-old non-smoker costs approximately Rs 10,000-14,000 annually. That is it.
Not Rs 50,000/year. Not seven policies. One term plan. Maximum cover. Minimum premium.
“Insurance is a foundation of your financial plan. Without a proper foundation, there is always a danger of the superstructure collapsing. But a bad foundation costs you twice – once in the wrong product, and once in what you could not build because the money was locked up.”
– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise
Read next: Term Insurance – Why It Is the Only Life Insurance You Actually Need
Do you know your actual life insurance requirement? Most people are shocked when they calculate it.
RetireWise reviews your insurance as part of every retirement plan. SEBI Registered. Fee-only.
My client with the seven LIC policies cancelled four of them, took the surrender value, invested it in mutual funds, and bought a Rs 1.5 crore term plan for Rs 14,000/year. His annual insurance premium dropped from Rs 2.8 lakh to Rs 14,000. His actual life cover went from Rs 42L to Rs 1.5 crore. He called it the best financial decision he ever made. The next best decision: he stopped picking up calls from his cousin who sold him three of those policies.
Buy insurance to protect your family. Not to please your agent. Not to save tax. Not to “invest.”
💬 Your Turn
How many life insurance policies do you have? Add up the total annual premium and total cover. Is the cover-to-premium ratio what your family actually needs – or is it what your agents needed to sell? Share below.


Hi Hemant
Very nice article.
Please tell me which term plan shoul I buy my age is 33 & I earn 2.2 lakh every year. Should one consider death claim settlement ratio while choosing term plan.
Hi Ankit
Selection of term plan depends on 3 things first claim settlement ratio, second comes companies financial strength or brand and the least important part is premium. I have seen many people who just concentrate on just premium part but you have very smartly raised point of claim settlement. LIC tops the chart in claim settlement with more than 90% rate. According to your age & Income you should have approximately 20-25 lakh sum assured. LIC have 2 term plans Jeevan Amulya & Anmol Jeevan – in Jeevan Amulya minimum sum assured is Rs 25 Lakh but premium is comparatively less. At age of 33 if you take a sum assured Rs 25 Lakh & if your term is 27 years – Premium will come around Rs 9900. If you think this premium is on higher side split your policy in 2 parts Rs 10 Lakh LIC Anmol Jeevan & Rs 15 Lakh Kotak Term Plan; this strategy will reduce your premium.
Keep Visiting 🙂
Hi Hemant,
Me and my friend started reading your blog around 1 month back and let me say the way you put it , is orderly and precise.
We are regular visitor of TFL and find these article as eye opener for ourself.
I am planning to get a term Insurance , My age is 29 and My sal is 7 L.
Recently I came to know abt one risk coverage plan from Aviva( Not sure abt the plan name). It was kind of term plan but with one advantage.
lets say that nothing happened in next 30 Yr then they will return that premium that we paid for this plan after 30 yr.
So my first quetion – Is it worth it to take this plan from aviva or should i split it as lic + aviva.
2nd thing is Aviva settlement % is around 88 % so can I go for it ??
Thanks
Satya
2 years back one insurance agent sold me ‘Jeevan Anand’ policy. It’s term is 20 years & Rs 5873 yearly. What kind of returns I can expect on this.
Hi Hardik
This plan is a combination of Endowment Assurance and Whole Life plans. It provides financial protection against death throughout the lifetime of the life assured with the provision of payment of a lump sum at the end of the selected term in case of his survival. So at the end of 20 years you will get approximately Rs 1.4 Lakh for this you will pay a premium of Rs 1.17 lakh in whole term; it means you are actually getting a return of less than 2%. But there is an added benefit that even after the term your death benefit continues. You have not mentioned your sum assured but I think it should be Rs 1 Lakh in your case. God forbid but if something happens to you in 21st policy year & your family gets that amount – means total cash flow of 2.4 lakh(1.4 maturity benefit & 1 lakh death benefit); still your return on your investment will be close to 6%. This makes it neither a good investment nor a good insurance.
Good article Hemant.
Indians are conservatives, who will not wish to spill out money. For this very reason, they will not spend money on anything which does not provide any return. So in case of insurance, they will only spend on the one having attractive(?) returns after policy period or in between or whatever. And LIC and other junks have managed to produce some idiotic products and sharp advertising and marketing make people to purchase these products. I really don’t know how many Indians are aware of why should one take insurance or what should be the sum assured. And our great insurance agents have succeeded in ‘educating’ the people that insurance is safest and best investment. Of course they are clever enough that they will market only something which will give good commissions. But what the hell is IRDA doing? My understanding is that IRDA’s role is to regulate insurance domain. Not investment domain. What were they doing till SEBI came up with ULIP issue?
I strongly suggest that government should come up with financial literacy programs. (Don’t delegate this to IRDA, please…) School curriculum should have basic financial literacy. Only then Indians will survive.
Thanks and Regards,
Shinoj Jose
Hi Shinoj
I really appreciate your views – if each one of us start thinking on your lines we will not need any help from govt.
Just to update govt. has started financial literacy programs in schools. Right now it’s at very initial stage & they have chosen Banglore & few other cities of south.(Just to test it) Even RBI has started few financial literacy cells in their branches but again they have very limited reach.
Financial Illiteracy is a Global Problem:
In Australian survey, 67 per cent of respondents indicated that they understood the concept of compound interest, yet when they were asked to solve a problem using the concept only 28 per cent had a good level of understanding.
Shinoj what do you think – how many Indians understand concept of compounding?
I think most Indians are aware of compound interest, as they are taught from school. But if given simple maths problem based on compound issue, i doubt how many can solve. But this does not means that they don’t know the concept. But the dangerous part is Indians understand compound interest as a type of calculating interest only. Not the actual need and power of it. Like the power of compounding.
Thanks and Regards,
Shinoj Jose
Ya Shinoj that’s called difference between Theory & Practice(practical) 😉
Sir
I regularly read your articles, they are really good.
I just compleded reading term plan artince & I would like to buy. Can you share some details regarding return of premium term plans.
Also tell me what should be my sum assured.
Hi Mukesh
It’s good to hear that these day people are seriously thinking about taking term plan. Insurance and financial planning are base of anyone financial life. Buying term plan should be the first thing that someone do once they start earning – even before you start thinking on any other goal or investment. But Mukesh there are many gaps in your question – First important think for suggestion of a plan is your age(which Is missing here); your premiums depend on age & term. My suggestion in don’t go for return of premium term plan as actually they are very expensive in comparison to normal term plans. It’s only a thing of psychology that I will not get anything back if I don’t survive – do you get something back on your vehicle insurance. But we are happy to pay vehicle insurance premium as if someday something will happen to my vehicle; I will get my money. This is the same purpose of life insurance if you are not there your family will get money – if you will survive you will be building your portfolio through savings & investments.
dear all !
Thanks for this very good work.Kindly remember the number of persons visiting these financial blogs are very very nominal.
Ordinary or innocent middle class people are now confused due to too much of products available with attracting words like guarnateed nav/value, secure and child education etc…
Hope the true message reaches the needy,
thanks in advance
Hi Srinivasu,
Ya you are right “number of persons visiting these financial blogs are very very nominal.”
We are doing our efforts by building this platform & promoting it with our limited time & resources. Now it’s on readers that how they can take it further.
If you read something good must share it with you friends. Someday we will definitely reach bottom of the pyramid.
Hi Hemant
Nice to see statistical information along with your review comment.
It is important to understand how Insurance and stock market works.
You have different views on policy in the market. and i am now confused….. how these companies make the customer foool?…
But still we neeed to build corpose for our future.What is the best way to do that?
I am not sure if you have already writtent any article on this? But
Can you share your views ?
regards
swanand
Hi Swanand,
Read what is Insurance – this should reduce your confusion
https://www.retirewise.in/2010/04/what-is-insurance-investment-or-expense.html
Also read long term & short term investment
https://www.retirewise.in/2010/06/long-term-and-short-term-investments.html
I agree with your artcle
Thanks Rohit.
Thanks Hemant for the useful information.
I am planning for good insurance policy and my agent explained me about LIC Jeevan Saral policy with Rs. 5000 p. m. option.
Not sure if I go for it (Jeevan Saral) or simply take any Term plan from Ageon or others.
or divide into Jeevan Saral and Term plan from low cost.
Please suggest.
Hi Kishor,
Its good that you are aware of term plans.I will like to suggest you that do take term plan from any other company and the remaining amount you can invest through sip in mutual funds by doing this you will not have to pay a sum of Rs 60000 yearly.
Buy a term plan which should be 10-15 times of your income.For ex:- If you buy a term plan from XYZ company for SA of Rs 50 Lakh for a term of 20 years it will cost you Rs 850o. so in that case you can save Rs 51500 yearly and that amount you can invest in Mutual fund through SIP which will help you in future goals.
Dear Mr. Beniwal,
You have been doing great service to the public. Kudos to you
Hi Hemanth,
Thanks a lot for your clear blogs about term plans which give a deep understanding . The part of your blogs which i like most is the use of diagram, which helps us to understand the things within a second.
Hi ,
In LIC – Jeevan saral realy gives 10 % returns end of the 10th year.
What is the link in lic to check current lotalty addition for each policy.
Appreciate your help in advance.
Hi Manjunath,
10% return from an endowment plan is impossible in current scenario.
You can visit LIC website to check loyalty additions but there is no single link which provides all information at one place.
HI Hemant,
I found your website few weeks back and have been spending a lot of time in reading thru various articles. You are really doing a great job in spreading the Financial Literacy. Your articles are straight and to the points. Thanks a lot for such an initiative.
I have a question about the insurance cover. You said, as a rule of thumb, insurance cover should be about 15 times of your annual income. But as one grows in career, income keep increasing. Does that mean from time to time, you need to keep increasing your insurance cover?
Thanks again for wonderful job of spreading the Financial Literacy.
Hi Vijay,
Thumb rule is:
Young person – 30 years – 13-15 times of your yearly income.
Middle Aged – 40 years – 8-10 times of your yearly income.
Near to retirement – 50 years – 4-5 times of your yearly income.
As you said “as one grows in career, income keep increasing” so try to apply above rule at different levels of career or age.
Dear Hemant
I am 29 year old and wanted to save a sum of 100000 Per Am . Kindly suggest some good insurance plan with higher return and good risk cover.
good job.thanks hemant to open my eyes.
Hello Sir, what are benifit of buying jeevan vridhi my age is 50 yrs wife 40 yrs,my son 15 yrs, dotr 8 yrs right now all r insured, but want to go for tax benifit for every yr/ rs.50,000.
Thanks Regards
Rajinder
Hi Rajinder,
Check this
https://www.retirewise.in/2012/03/lic-jeevan-vriddhi.html
Hi Hemant,
I have came across about TFL, when i was trying read about the LIC lauched child plan. I really appriciate the reviews, information shared and it is indeed educative. I need advice from you.
Keeping in mind about Retire benefits & insurance, i have following insurance policy.
1) Jeevan Saral policy (agent cal Magic plan -Retire & enjoy in his illustrative sheets!!), The sum assured is Rs.41,83,900, premium; monthly – Rs.10208/-.
My idea for taking the plan is to have regular good income in the form of pension at the earliest, utilize the tax benefit under 80C & getting the insurance cover. As per th illustrative sheets of the agent, it works like as below.
Age : 37 (at the time of starting of this policy ie., Nov 2010)
Premium: Rs.10208/- monthly (yest it is monthly).
Sum assured (as on the policy) : Rs.41,83,900/-
I need to pay the premium till the age of 53 ie., for 15 years till year 2025 ( i will end up in paying Rs. 18,73,568). From 2026 onwards, i will start getting returns of Rs.2,84,986/-annually) upto age of 75years – yr 2048 (the last 6 years ie., from age 70 to 75, no accident cover)
But the at the maturity, no amount will be given.
Death benefits sum assured under mail plan is Rs.25,00,000/- , Accident benefit sum assured is Rs.25,00,000/-.
Basically i wanted to have a good pension plan which gives atleast Rs.25,000/-month & with best of information i can get that time have selected the above.
1) I have plan to go for home loan buying home this year.
2) I have assets of 2x sites worth total appx.8lac.
3) No fixed deposit
4) Have a son of 8 years of age , so need to plan for his education.
Now pl advice me is it a good choice? or should i close this & go for some other pension plan.
Hi Hemant,
Even I have the same question as Mr.Prakash. Even I was proposed this “Magic plan -Retire & enjoy” by an agent. But the monthly premuim and sum assured are different but the policy wordings remain same.
Can you please let me know if that is a good instrumetn for retirement planning ?
Hi Prakash,
Any investment should be planned keeping in mind inflation and other factors.
Any product will be good if it matches your requirement. The expenses at retirement will be higher then what you incur today because of inflation.Hence you need to identify your exact requirement i.e. what you will need tomorrow then only viability of any product can be analyzed.
Moreover, evaluate the alternatives i.e. NPS and mutual Funds. Since the pension is based on the corpus you accumulate, analyze on the latter objective.
Hallo Sir,
most of people suggest for buying Term Insurance Plan
but no one give details of reasons of Claim Reject Case in Term Insurance……
Please guide this
Dear Bajirao,
Read this
https://www.retirewise.in/2011/04/why-life-insurance-claim-gets-rejected.html
hello sir,
it was really informative to read your articles. i need some help.
my age is 26 years, will be getting around 17000 rupees/month in hand.
right now my monthly expenses are about 7000-8000 rs..i.e i will save round 8000rs/ month.
plz advice me as to where i should invest this amount, and also if possible name some schemes under each category. thanx a lot
Hi Rohit,
You can read the following-
https://www.retirewise.in/2012/01/best-mutual-funds-to-invest-in-2012-in-india.html
https://www.retirewise.in/2010/10/do-you-really-understand-sip.html
Hi Hemanth,
This blog is very informative 🙂
I am planning to buy a term insurance. From your experience please suggest me the two good compines from which i can take the term insurance.
Even let me know should I go online mode or offline mode for this one
Thanks a lot in adance.
Thanks for educating everyone through the blog
Hi Prabhu,
Read this
https://www.retirewise.in/2011/03/best-term-insurance-plan-india.html
Hi Hemant,
Please tell me which term plan should I buy my Date or Birth 27.9.1979 & I earn 1.50 lakh every year.I Have 3Depends (Wife And 2 Daughters ) Should one consider death claim settlement ratio while choosing term plan.
Hi Ashish,
You can check online term plans from ICICI & Kotak.
Hi Sir,
My Name is Manjunath(31), I would like to start SIP in Mutal fund for my child(age 1) education and to have a corpus for marriage also.
I can able to pay monthly 2500 in mutual funds. Kindly view my portfolio and let me know do i need to change. After your comments, will start my SIP(each 500) 5 funds.
Appreciate your advice in advance.
ELSS
Canara Robeco Equity Tax Saver (G)
ICICI Prudential Tax Plan (G)
Sundaram Tax Saver (OE) (G)
IDFC Tax advantage Fund
Large Cap
ICICI Prudential Focused Bluechip Equity Fund (G)
DSP-BR Top 100 Equity – RP (G)
SBI Magnum Equity Fund (G)
Balanced Fund
HDFC Balanced Fund (G)
Reliance Regular Savings Fund – Balanced Option (G)
Small & Mid Cap
HDFC Mid-Cap Opportunities Fund (G)
SBI Magnum Emerging Businesses Fund (G)
Can I invest in FMG funds, i am not aware how it will perform in future, pls advice.
Thanks
Manjunath.C
Hi Manjunath,
Read this to clarify your doubts:
https://www.retirewise.in/2011/05/sector-fund.html
Hi Hemant,
Really I found a good article about insurance.
I am little bit confuse about insurance company I will go with.
As per ratio of settlement LIC and HDFC is in top.
Can you suggest me what should I prefer in above .
Age :30Yr
Status : Married
Wife :Working with salary 4.5 lack/anm
My Salary: 6.8lack/anm
Thanks,
Nawab Ansari
Hi Nawab,
Claim settlement should not be the only criteria as there are many factors for choosing a term insurance. Mortality rates is one of them. LIC has not revised its rates and so the premium rates are very high. Comparing, HDFC will be quite cheaper.So you can go ahead with the company.
Hello Hemant,
I have few Questions on Term Insurance.
Lets say. today I am buying a Term Insurance for Rs.7000 which covers 50 lacks. Total Tenure is for 30 years. So, Total Amount I would be paying is 2.1 lacks
Now the Questions is what if after 1o years, the term insurance becomes cheaper(due to competition and other factors). Rs.3500 which covers 50 lacks.
I would be in paying Rs.7000 in that moment when people are buying for Rs.3500. So, Should I stop the Old Insurance and get the new Insurance?
By this I feel, Term Insurance should be Yearly as we dont get any returns anyhow. What are your views and How we need to plan term insurance considering the future value of money and insurance.
Thanks
Suresh
Hi Suresh,
Life Insurance are always long term contract even worldwide. Thats why hey are cheap since unlike health insurance your premium remains same irrespective of increase in your age.The rates of insurance gets revised due to change in mortality and experience of companies.. But also consider that you will grow in age so difference will not be to large if compared with premium rates at that age. Alternatively, the benefit of term is that you can always change your policy if you desire to.
Excellent Information Hemant. Keep up the good work.
A lot of people will benefit from this information.
hi Hemant…
your article is very revolutionary bcoz many agents makes the Indians fools out here.
I have join your e-course and discuss it in my friend circle..two friends and myself decided to take term plan from two different company..
thanks GURU ji..
Good article. Please suggest good child plan.
Thanks
Dear Sheetal,
Read this
https://www.retirewise.in/2011/07/child-future-plan.html
Hi,
I hold a policy from ‘ICICI Prudential’ – Premier Life Gold Type U42 for a sum assured of Rs 50 laks and 20 year term starting from 15/01/2010. I have completed the prenium term for 3 years. I am NRI and my current age is 43 years. I wish to start a new term insurance for Rs 1 crore from another insurance company. Do you think this is recommended when I already have a poilicy in force?. If yes which is the best term insurance and what should be the term period.
Hi Nilesh,
Firstly the policy you have is a ULIP in which you are paying higher charges because of high SA you have taken. This will impact your returns in the long term. If insurance is your requirement then viable option is to avail a term insurance policy. You can consider Kotak, Birla,ICICI or HDFC for buying the required amount of coverage.
Hi Hemant! Good Morning!
I shall try to explain in short of my requirement and mindset to help you arrive at the best available Plan suited for me……
I wish to invest on a Health Plan (Medi-claim type) by this month end before I turn 45yrs on the 07th Dec 2012.
I heard that the yearly premiums are low if you take a policy at a younger age.
My D.O.B. is 07-Dec-1967, i.e. 44yrs 11+months.
I’m residing at Kolkata and will be travelling on a foreign assignment next month for a duration of 2 yrs. Hence eager to take a policy while I’m still in India.
Though presently I’m covered by my Company’s (private ltd. Co.) policy, I wish to have one Policy of my Own for my post retirement yrs.
Following are my specific requirements to select a suitable Health Plan viz.:
(1) A single Plan covering only two Adults (i.e. Self and Spouse)
[I’m excluding our son from the plan intentionally to reduce my premium amount. He will be however covered by his Company when he starts working].
(2) The Mediclaim/Health Plan has to be 100% CASHLESS transaction
[No administrative/financial fuss should arise at the time of hospitalisation].
(3) Maximum Hospitals must be covered under such a Plan.
(4) The Plan which gives the maximum age cover like upto 85 yrs or more.
(5) Plan should have an online Top-Up facility (i.e. if I want to increase my Sum Assured any time in future whenever I have spare funds).
(6) The Plan should also keep increasing my Sum Assured by a certain percentage each year while keeping my premium fixed/unaltered. This is to nullify the impact of inflation.
(7) For a family cover of 5 lakhs combined (either of two) each year, what will be my best premium and with whom?
Kindly send me your expert advice of which Health/Mediclaim Plan you recommend that takes care of all my above mentioned 6(six) points.
Eagerly awaiting your email response as I do not have much time on hand.
Best Regards
Bapp
Hi Bapp,
Although its a bit late but here is few suggestions:
1. In Basic Health Plans you get cashless facility with a good hospital network
2.There is life long renewability.
3.The SA increases every year through NO Claim Bonus (5-20%)when you do not claim. However, there is a limit to increase of upto 50% of SA but no fixed increasing SA in any health plans.
4.You can increase the SA if you want to but only at renewal.
You can consider Apollo Munich or Max Bhupa if you haven’t gone for your health plan uptil now.
Hi Bapp,
Although its a bit late but here is few suggestions:
1. In Basic Health Plans you get cashless facility with a good hospital network
2.There is life long renewability.
3.The SA increases every year through NO Claim Bonus (5-20%)when you do not claim. However, there is a limit to increase of upto 50% of SA but no fixed increasing SA in any health plans.
4.You can increase the SA if you want to but only at renewal.
You can consider Apollo Munich or Max Bhupa if you haven’t gone for your health plan uptil now.
Hi,
I am 34 yrs married and have 1 year old daughter. My salray is 10+ lakh per annum.
what should be the term of my term insurance? should I buy one or split it into 2 companies? which company is better. please suggest
SIR,
PLEASE LET ME KNOW ABOUT THE SCHEMES IN WHICH I CAN INVEST IN 2012-2013 TO GET TAX BENEFITS UNDER 80-CCG(RAJIV GANDHI EQUITY SCHEME)
Dear Hemanth,
With your guidance, i have selected a term insurance plan before one month, I have selected “AEGON RELIGARE” i term policy & applied for 1 crore term policy for which the premium is around 22,000 PM as i am aged 34 years & a tobacco user.
Understood from above discussions that we should also concern of claim settlements, came to know up on inquiring Aegon religare is having a very poor ratio of claim settlement. Please advise if there is any other option or substitute to over come ??.
Regards.
Subhani.
Hi Hemanth,
I am 27yrs old. I am plan to buy a term insurance and my annual income was 3.5lakhs. comparably HDFC AND LIC have good settlement ratio which i seen through online. Now i have four questions follow the below,
* I planning to buy rs 50 lakhs term policy & it’s was right chosen for my annual income?.
* Can i buy a one policy for 50 lakhs or split into 2 polices. if i choose one insurance means which one is better HDFC CLICK 2 PRODUCT LIFE or LIC .
* If any other good insurance companies rather than this means pls advice me which one is best company….
Thanks & Regards,
RAJKUMAR
hi Hemanth….
thanks a lot for a very nice and useful article…
please suggest me a term plan .. my age is 27 y and my annual income is about 1.7 L..
Hi Hemant,
3 years back one insurance agent sold me ‘Jeevan Anand’ policy. It’s term is 21 years & Rs. 15,878 yearly, Sum assured is Rs.3,00,000. What kind of returns I can expect on this. Also planing to take term insurance for my Husband, his age is 30years, annual income is 2.5lacsP.A. please suggest the best term plan or combination of plans with best advantages & insurance company.
Hi Hemant,
I advocate that one needs to go ahead and buy a term insurance policy that matches or covers the goals one needs to achieve. This is a point of view of the financial planners like you and me. however, if any agent goes ahead and tells the client “if anything happens to you then your heirs will receive this much of money” the client gets angry. NO ONE likes to hear that one day HE/SHE is going to die (though its a known fact) And probably this is the reason why the variants of term insurance plans that is the various participating policies were introduced.
As far as i understand the purpose of these policies was to encourage people to buy the insurance and now people are looking at insurance as a tax saving mechanism (more than 70% people) or as an investment tool.
Correct me if i have misunderstood anything
Dear Hemant,
Term plans are good products if you have loans amounting to crores and have to pay large EMIs. Most Home loanproviders would ask for your life insurance profile before they give you the cheque. Hence it is some sort of a collateral. But I will more love to read about Health insurance plans offered by LIC and other Pvt Insurers because it is important to make you live without letting the large chunks of money siphoning off your wallet when you are bed ridden in a hospital- life insurance is when you cease to exist. Do write articles on that( health products). It is seen that people opting for Term plans offered by Insurers are not covered by any Health Insurance- in USA it is more important to have a health cover than a life cover- even bloggers like Hemantji, who advise their readers to go for term plans – do not at all advise ‘us’ to have a health cover-Sir….looking forward to read about health products from YOU at the earliest. We will be benefitted a lot Sir…Thanks and happy writing Sir!!!!!!!!!!!Awaiting your guidance……
Hi,
I have LIC Endowment Assurance Policy – Magic Plan Retire and Enjoy, since 2004 where I have been paying premium Rs. 23377/Year and sum propsed is 950000. Last premium @ age of 57.
So is this good to continue? Or shall I close this and invest in Term Insurance?
If I surrender how much I will get?
-Mayuresh
Mayuresh,
The plan with such names are not any magic but simple combination of endowment plans with different maturity dates. So you need to look at what benefits you are going to receive form the product. In general endowment plan does not do well on providing a high insurance coverage and returns. For insurance you should look at term plans. For investments there are alternatives which will deliver you better results. Good to avoid any combo products.
Hello sir , your psychology of an indian people is a very good article to learn about insurance planning ! Sir would you please tell me which is the best insurance plan for individual who earns 2 to 2.5 lac ( P.A )
Ajay,
Thanks for appreciation!!!
For buying insurance term plans are the most wiser options and you should go with them. You can consider buying it online. Read the articles below:
https://www.retirewise.in/2011/03/best-term-insurance-plan-india.html
https://www.retirewise.in/2010/05/term-plan-the-right-way-to-take-insurance.html
Hi Hemant ji,
I recently joined TFL and articles which you are writing are very systematic and easy to understand.Firstly thanks for it.
Currently I am looking for Term insurance plan for myself and spouse.
Please let me know, In which term plan I should invest and why?
My age is 28 and Sallery annually 6Lac
Wife age 27 and Sallery annually 9 lac
Thanks Navnath. You can check HDFC & Birla
https://www.retirewise.in/2012/01/hdfc-life-click-2-protect.html
how good are endowment plans from LIC?
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