Moneynet
Moneynet
print this page  tell a friend about Moneynet  bookmark Moneynet
home
credit cards
loans
insurance
mortgages
banking & saving
ISA/PEP Monitor
refused credit
debt solutions
gas & electricity
best buys
resources
product guides
Guide to credit cards
Guide to mortgages
Guide to loans
Guide to life insurance
Guide to ethical investing
Guide to family finance
Guide to student finance
Guide to insurance
making money
news
 

Get the Moneynet
News Feed

moneynet rss feed

Help, what is RSS?

Let us search for you

  

life insurance guide


Download PDF Format

5. Who should be covered?

Life assurance is not merely the sole province of the 'breadwinner', or the person who earns the largest salary. For a family with young children, the spouse providing the bulk of the childcare - often but not always the woman - performs a function that, in the event of their death, costs the family a great deal to replace with outside help.

A family that loses its stay-at-home mother may, for example, have to hire a full-time live-in nanny to provide the same sort of care, and will have to provide relief cover as well for evenings, weekends and holidays.

Spouses can arrange separate life assurance policies, but a more economical route could be to arrange joint life assurance cover, where the policy pays out if either spouse or partner dies during the term of the policy. Depending on the particular policy, the benefit may be paid out at the death of the first policyholder, or to a separate beneficiary upon the death of the second policyholder.


Life insurance guide

life insurance quote
life insurance quote




Contents

Download PDF Format


1