how does life insurance make sense, like how does $40/month for 10 years get you 500,000 life insurance?

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I’m probably just stupid 😭

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The vast majority of life insurance is TERM life insurance, which covers for a specific period of time.

Typically, one gets term coverage for a period of time like until kids would be adults or house is paid off.

So some 30 year old who just bought a house and had a kid might get a 30 year term policy, which then covers them from age 30 to 60. Since most people don’t die in that age span, most policies don’t pay out. The 20 policies that don’t pay out for every one that does cover the costs. Plus, those $40/mo are invested by the insurance company and grow beyond just setting aside the money.

Anonymous 0 Comments

You’re unlikely to die within those 10 years, so the insurance company is betting that they will collect payments from you but pay out nothing.

Then they have a million other clients that they’re pricing similar plans for. Since they have *extensive* statistics on the chance of people dying, they’re likely to only end up paying out a few of those policies.

Anonymous 0 Comments

For term life insurance the bet is if you give 10,000 people coverage for 10 years, for $40/month each, you’ll have $48 million in revenue, and pay out perhaps $45 million in claims. You’ll also get to earn some interest because the majority of the deaths will likely happen later in the 10 years rather than evenly across the whole period.

Anonymous 0 Comments

For term life insurance the bet is if you give 10,000 people coverage for 10 years, for $40/month each, you’ll have $48 million in revenue, and pay out perhaps $45 million in claims. You’ll also get to earn some interest because the majority of the deaths will likely happen later in the 10 years rather than evenly across the whole period.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There are two major forms of life insurance: term life, and whole life.

Term life only applies for a specific *term*, usually while you keep making those payments, and the rates will usually change every year. Many people have this through your job – and if you leave your job, the term ends. So this is really cheap (mine’s a few bucks a month), because of the large number of people who don’t die while still working – they die after retiring, hopefully. Or, if you’re young, you’ll at least switch jobs before croaking, which means they don’t have to pay out. I worked at my last job for almost 10 years before moving to another company – all of the money I gave to their life insurance company was basically free for them, since I stayed alive through the term.

Whole life though, that’s a different story – this lasts forever until you die, meaning (unless some exclusion applies, or unless it’s cancelled for some reason like missing payments), every whole life policy will *eventually* pay out their benefit. And here’s the thing about whole life: insurance companies actually do *lose* money, if you just look at the premium they take in (your payments) compared to the benefits they pay out after death. They’re the only type of insurance where that happens.

But what makes up that difference is investments – for most of their policyholders, a life insurance company knows that they have years, often decades, before they’ll have to pay anything out. This means that the money they take in can be invested for a super long term, so long as they keep enough cash on hand to cover the people who *do* die in that period. Because of that, they can make huge returns on their investments, and it still ends up profitable. And of course, keep in mind that a cheap price is only going to happen if you’re young and healthy. If you’re a 60-year old with a smoking habit, whole life insurance is either going to cost *much* more, or they just won’t offer you a policy at all.

**TL;DR:** Even if you’re only paying a small amount per month, they’re investing your money until you croak. These investments make up your death benefit and more in most cases; this is enough to cover people who die earlier (and therefore haven’t paid in as much), plus room for profit.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There are two major forms of life insurance: term life, and whole life.

Term life only applies for a specific *term*, usually while you keep making those payments, and the rates will usually change every year. Many people have this through your job – and if you leave your job, the term ends. So this is really cheap (mine’s a few bucks a month), because of the large number of people who don’t die while still working – they die after retiring, hopefully. Or, if you’re young, you’ll at least switch jobs before croaking, which means they don’t have to pay out. I worked at my last job for almost 10 years before moving to another company – all of the money I gave to their life insurance company was basically free for them, since I stayed alive through the term.

Whole life though, that’s a different story – this lasts forever until you die, meaning (unless some exclusion applies, or unless it’s cancelled for some reason like missing payments), every whole life policy will *eventually* pay out their benefit. And here’s the thing about whole life: insurance companies actually do *lose* money, if you just look at the premium they take in (your payments) compared to the benefits they pay out after death. They’re the only type of insurance where that happens.

But what makes up that difference is investments – for most of their policyholders, a life insurance company knows that they have years, often decades, before they’ll have to pay anything out. This means that the money they take in can be invested for a super long term, so long as they keep enough cash on hand to cover the people who *do* die in that period. Because of that, they can make huge returns on their investments, and it still ends up profitable. And of course, keep in mind that a cheap price is only going to happen if you’re young and healthy. If you’re a 60-year old with a smoking habit, whole life insurance is either going to cost *much* more, or they just won’t offer you a policy at all.

**TL;DR:** Even if you’re only paying a small amount per month, they’re investing your money until you croak. These investments make up your death benefit and more in most cases; this is enough to cover people who die earlier (and therefore haven’t paid in as much), plus room for profit.

Anonymous 0 Comments

For term life insurance the bet is if you give 10,000 people coverage for 10 years, for $40/month each, you’ll have $48 million in revenue, and pay out perhaps $45 million in claims. You’ll also get to earn some interest because the majority of the deaths will likely happen later in the 10 years rather than evenly across the whole period.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There are two major forms of life insurance: term life, and whole life.

Term life only applies for a specific *term*, usually while you keep making those payments, and the rates will usually change every year. Many people have this through your job – and if you leave your job, the term ends. So this is really cheap (mine’s a few bucks a month), because of the large number of people who don’t die while still working – they die after retiring, hopefully. Or, if you’re young, you’ll at least switch jobs before croaking, which means they don’t have to pay out. I worked at my last job for almost 10 years before moving to another company – all of the money I gave to their life insurance company was basically free for them, since I stayed alive through the term.

Whole life though, that’s a different story – this lasts forever until you die, meaning (unless some exclusion applies, or unless it’s cancelled for some reason like missing payments), every whole life policy will *eventually* pay out their benefit. And here’s the thing about whole life: insurance companies actually do *lose* money, if you just look at the premium they take in (your payments) compared to the benefits they pay out after death. They’re the only type of insurance where that happens.

But what makes up that difference is investments – for most of their policyholders, a life insurance company knows that they have years, often decades, before they’ll have to pay anything out. This means that the money they take in can be invested for a super long term, so long as they keep enough cash on hand to cover the people who *do* die in that period. Because of that, they can make huge returns on their investments, and it still ends up profitable. And of course, keep in mind that a cheap price is only going to happen if you’re young and healthy. If you’re a 60-year old with a smoking habit, whole life insurance is either going to cost *much* more, or they just won’t offer you a policy at all.

**TL;DR:** Even if you’re only paying a small amount per month, they’re investing your money until you croak. These investments make up your death benefit and more in most cases; this is enough to cover people who die earlier (and therefore haven’t paid in as much), plus room for profit.

Anonymous 0 Comments

If you die, your payout comes from the people who didn’t die, not from your contribution. The purpose of insurance is to share risk among a group of people, not to fund your own risk.

Anonymous 0 Comments

If you die, your payout comes from the people who didn’t die, not from your contribution. The purpose of insurance is to share risk among a group of people, not to fund your own risk.