ss_blog_claim=4c95399e63de648d0abd96bb831d3e11 Insurance: Critical Illness Insurance

Before You Start

  • Think about how you would pay for routine expenses if you or another income-earning adult in your home were to suffer a disability and stop working?
  • Ask your employer whether disability income insurance is offered as an optional workplace benefit.
  • If you're an employer, consider offering it as a benefit to attract and retain desired workers.
  • If you already own disability income insurance, take a fresh look at the policy to learn about the level of coverage it provides, eligibility requirements, etc.

Critical Illness Insurance

Posted by art's2007 | 8/14/2008

Critical illness cover is becoming increasingly popular with the modern technology and medicine of today, which means that more and more people are now surviving a critical illness. If you have life policy it can greatly help to relieve financial stress at a time when all you need to be worrying about is getting fit and well and back on your feet.

Critical illness insurance can be taken out for a wide range of illnesses which would leave you seriously ill or disabled. Some of the most common illnesses include cancer, stroke, heart attack or kidney failure and are defined in the terms and conditions of the policy so it is essential you read the small print.

The money you would receive from a policy once the waiting period had passed would be tax free and would be a lump sum payout.

Although the terms and conditions can vary in a policy one of the most important conditions you have to meet is that you would usually have to live for at least 30 days after being diagnosed with the illness before the cover would payout.

While a policy covers a lot of different conditions there are exclusions and these too can be found in the small print, for example not all types of cancer sufferers would be eligible to claim.

If you should be diagnosed as having a critical illness you do not want the additional stress of having to find the money to live comfortably while you were recovering. A critical illness is defined as a stroke, heart attack, cancer or suffering from kidney failure but there are up to 30 others and you have to check the small print of a policy.

1 comments
  1. Anonymous September 27, 2010 at 2:13 PM  

    Most of us who're scared of a critical illness will apply for disability insurance. Little do we know that with disability insurance we'll just get an amount that's set for that particular illness. On the other hand, if we opt for critical illness insurance we'll get a reimbursement worth our entire policy limit. That's where critical illness insurance is more beneficial to us.

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