This article defines Insurance Planning as the process of selecting appropriate insurance products (life, health, disability, long-term care) to manage financial risks associated with deaths, illness, injury, or incapacity. Core planning questions: (1) how much coverage? (2) what type of policy? (3) what duration? (4) how to integrate with other assets? The article addresses: objectives of insurance planning; key concepts including income replacement, risk pooling, and elimination period; core mechanisms such as needs analysis, term vs permanent calculation, and LTC inflation protection; international comparisons and debated issues (self-insurance, group vs individual, hybrid products); summary and emerging trends (accelerated deaths benefits, chronic illness riders, parametric insurance); and a Q&A section.
This article describes insurance planning without endorsing specific products. Objectives commonly cited: preventing financial catastrophe, replacing lost income, covering final expenses, and preserving wealth transfer.
Key terminology:
Coverage need estimates:
| Insurance type | Rule of thumb calculation |
|---|---|
| Life | 10-12x annual income + debt + education costs + final expenses |
| Disability | 60-70% of income (group plan often provides) |
| Long-term care | 50,000−150,000/year(facility);50,000−150,000/year(facility);20-50k/year (home care) |
Term vs permanent life insurance:
Long-term care (LTC) planning:
Debated issues:
Summary: Life insurance need = 10-12x income. Term covers temporary needs; permanent for estate planning. Disability insurance = 60-70% income replacement. LTC insurance or self-insure for later-life care costs. Health insurance basics covered in Article 9.
Emerging trends:
Q1: When should I buy life insurance?
A: When others depend on your income (spouse, children, elderly parents). Early 20s-30s (cheaper, healthy). Single with no dependents may not need.
Q2: How much disability insurance do I need?
A: Enough to cover essential expenses (housing, food, utilities, insurance). Employer group plans often cover 50-60%; individual policy can add 10-20%. Use elimination period (90 days) to lower premium.
Q3: Is long-term care insurance worth it?
A: For those with 300k−2Minassets(excludingprimaryresidence).Below300k−2Minassets(excludingprimaryresidence).Below300k, Medicaid may cover facility care. Above $2M, self-insure. Middle range benefits most.
https://www.naic.org/consumers.htm
https://www.lifehappens.org/
https://www.aaltci.org/ (long-term care)