3 types of insurance to pay final expense
There is no standard type of final expense insurance. The term “final expense insurance” describes any insurance policy or other legal contract purchased with the intent of providing for final expenses. The amount of final expense insurance coverage depends on how much you want final expenses to cost. In most states, the only people licensed to write a final expense policy are life insurance agents and funeral directors.
Variations range from traditional whole life insurance to policies or agreements that only cover funeral expenses:
- Life insurance with family member as beneficiary – Many people who already have traditional life insurance simply purchase enough to include funeral expenses. However, if you don’t have life insurance, you can purchase final expense insurance with the intention of using the proceeds to cover funeral expenses. You can name a family member as your beneficiary.
- Life insurance with funeral director named as beneficiary – A funeral home may include a small whole life policy with a contract for funeral services, with the requirement that the funeral director is the beneficiary of the policy. In this way, you pay for part or all of your funeral expenses using a life insurance policy that you pay for – and the death benefit goes exclusively to the funeral home – not to your family.
- Pre-need contract with funeral home – A pre-need contract often covers the burial plot, grave marker, casket or urn, embalming or cremation, flowers and funeral cars. Some policies may not specify what the death benefit can be used for. In that case, the money can be used however the beneficiary decides.
Paying for Final Expense Insurance
Depending on the type of policy or contract you buy, you may either have one, lump-sum payment or continuing monthly payments. A contract with a funeral home will most likely include a payment plan.
Your coverage may determine what kind of payment schedule you have:
- Single-premium policy – Once you make the lump-sum payment, you have immediate coverage for the full death benefit. If you’re over 70, you may only be offered a single-premium payment option.
- Graded death benefit – This means the coverage amount increases over time. If you choose a five-year payment policy, your loved ones may have a death benefit that is 30% of the face amount in the first year, 70% the next year and 100% thereafter.
- Traditional whole life policy – The coverage amount stays the same as long as you pay the premiums, but coverage ends if you stop paying.