Re: Mortgage Protection Policies...Advice
Hi,
Mortgage Protection, aka Decreasing Term Assurance
This is a requirement of your mortgage. It’s a policy, which will repay the outstanding balance of your mortgage in the event of your death. The cover will start at your mortgage amount and decrease over the term as you repay the principal.
Mortgage Protection with Specified Serious Illness Cover
This is a similar type of policy to the above but a claim will be paid in the event of either your death or your suffering from one of the specified serious illnesses, e.g. Heart Attack, Cancer, Stroke, Kidney Failure and others from a list issued by the insurer.
Term Assurance
This type of policy will pay a fixed amount on death, irrespective of the amount outstanding at the time. In the event of a claim any excess over the outstanding mortgage balance will be paid to your estate.
Convertible Term Assurance
Same as Term Assurance above, but the policy also contains an option to continue your cover beyond the term, irrespective of your health at that time.
Both Term Assurance and Convertible Term Assurance are available with optional Specified Serious Illness cover.
Mortgage Repayment Protection
Often confused with Mortgage Protection above due to their annoyingly similar names. MRP is optional, and covers you for an agreed monthly amount (usually roughly equal to your monthly mortgage repayment). The amount is payable if you cannot work due to illness, accident or compulsory redundancy for longer than four weeks. (Redundancy cover only available to arms-length employees, not directors or self-employed.) The claim will be paid for a maximum of 12 months.
Specified serious illness cover is of value, but it's up to you to decide if it's an option you wish to pay the extra premium for.
There's an argument that says that you should take out Convertible Term Assurance policy when you're young for a larger amount of cover than your mortgage, as you can use it when you're trading up, and the rates will be fixed at your "young" age. The argument has merit, but personally I don't agree.
Example - 25year old male non-smoker borrowing €150,000 over 25 years. Mortgage Protection €10.61 per month. Five years time he trades up and gets a new mortgage of €200,000 over 25 years. Mortgage Protection premium €13.09 per month. If he had got a €200,000 Convertible Term Assurance policy over 30 years when he was 25 years old, the poremium would be fixed at €16.03 per month. No saving here.
The above example falls down if the ages are different, or if our man has dependents in which case the excess of life cover is of value to him. It all falls down seriously if he becomes gravely ill between the age of 25 and 30, in which case he cannot get a new mortgage protection policy when he wants to trade up.
So my point is that no easy rule of thumb applies to every situation - examine the options.
Liam D Ferguson
www.ferga.com