.

Get quotes elsewhere. If they are significantly different, go to the family member and show them what you came up with. They can't be that surprised that a family member might want to save a few hundred dollars in premiums or whatever it may be.
 
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I would rather just save money up for that through an emergency fund vs paying a premium.

My childrens' life insurance is for 10k which gains value with time... and it stays with them for life. I have two kids. Grand total of 3 dollars a month. You go ahead and save your premiums and have a steak dinner at the end of the year.

And I thought I was frugal.
 
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My childrens' life insurance is for 10k which gains value with time... and it stays with them for life. I have two kids. Grand total of 3 dollars a month. You go ahead and save your premiums and have a steak dinner at the end of the year.

And I thought I was frugal.

I didn't realize the premiums were that cheap - maybe not a bad deal after all - thanks for the info.
 
It has to be Farm Bureau, and I'm not sure if it's just their property and casualty policies that are tied to the fee, or if the life insurance products are as well.

Life insurance on a child is pretty cheap, we have $30k on both of our daughters, and they are $161 a year. As previously mentioned, most parents that buy insurance on a child are doing it in the even that the child passes young, they have to pay for hospital bills, funeral bills, and possibly having more time off of work than they have built up in PTO. It helps things bank roll until you can get back on your feet (oddly worded, as dealing with the death of a young child is something I don't wish on my worst enemies, which are you damn cyclone fans! :) Kidding, on that part).

Plus, the earlier you buy life insurance, the cheaper it will stay versus buying it when you're 25 or 30 - speaking of whole life of course. And yes, I sell insurance, and no, I don't peddle life insurance.
 
Why buy insurance on the child? What do you mean it comes down to what you believe in?

Yeah whole life can be effective in certain situations, but for 99% of the people out there they should have term and quit padding the insurance salesman's pocket.

Whole life has it's place. I prefer to keep my investments separate from my insurance but i understand it's place in someone's portfolio. I think the OPs post wasn't to critique his lifestyle but to look for a graceful way out of an expensive proposition.

To that point - I got nothing. I don't like conflict.
 
I was in the same situation as you. I had insurance with my father in law. He worked in a town an hour away. I wanted to "do business in the community we live and work in" and wanted to change to our local town insurance agent. Plus we saved like $200 a year. My wife was a little concerned how he was going to take it. My FIL never batted an eye. He completely understood and thanked us for our previous business.

Also, at the time of the switch, my new insurance agent set my kids up as a rider on my wife's life insurance policy. They are covered up to $10K for $10 a year.
 
I would be as respectful as you can be and lay the facts in front of him - ask him what he would do in the situation. Taking care of your family is the most important thing, if the agent can't understand that, it is a lack of maturity on their part IMO.
 
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While people are talking insurance, make sure you read the policies over really good. I am facing an issue currently with my insurance company where they are denying me insurance under the pollution exclusion, due to the use of cleaning products.

As a company insured as a Janitorial services company this came as a shock to me. That I had been paying premiums for years, but my insurance would of never covered me if an incident with soap came about.

With the way insurance companies define a pollutant it can be very wide ranging in what they include in it.

So just a warning so you can prevent headaches I am having to face right now. Read every word of the policy then make sure you read it again. If something doesn't sound right make sure you check into it.
 
While people are talking insurance, make sure you read the policies over really good. I am facing an issue currently with my insurance company where they are denying me insurance under the pollution exclusion, due to the use of cleaning products.

As a company insured as a Janitorial services company this came as a shock to me. That I had been paying premiums for years, but my insurance would of never covered me if an incident with soap came about.

With the way insurance companies define a pollutant it can be very wide ranging in what they include in it.

So just a warning so you can prevent headaches I am having to face right now. Read every word of the policy then make sure you read it again. If something doesn't sound right make sure you check into it.

One would sure think that your agent should have known to endorse (if possible...I don't write any janitorial services companies) pollution coverage. I don't know a single policy that it is automatically included on, but I can endorse it on about everything that we write.
 
One would sure think that your agent should have known to endorse (if possible...I don't write any janitorial services companies) pollution coverage. I don't know a single policy that it is automatically included on, but I can endorse it on about everything that we write.

Unfortunately due to this incident I am having to deal with my agents errors and omissions carry as well. The whole situation is a giant cluster ****, and it pisses me off that I am paying out thousands of dollars in attorney fees to defend myself.
 
I would make it personal to let him know youre serious. Call him a cheat and a liar to get his attention. Follow this closely by questioning his manhood.

This should ensure the conversation goes smoothly and adequately servers any potential relationship you could have had in the future.
 
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You ask a lot of random questions. I feel like you are doing a "choose your own adventure" book through cyclone fanatic forums.
 
Unfortunately due to this incident I am having to deal with my agents errors and omissions carry as well. The whole situation is a giant cluster ****, and it pisses me off that I am paying out thousands of dollars in attorney fees to defend myself.

Well, good luck to you.
 
Exactly, I have seen lots of people buy $10,000 or $25,000 policies on kids just in case something happens to cover funeral costs or medical costs associated with the death.

Plus it is a whole life policy in most cases for kids so once they leave the home you can give them this small inexpensive policy to keep as a Yount adult.
 
I wouldn't be surprised if the guy jumping into the net, (he hopes), without a parachute is covered by your provider. They would probably cover him and hose you, I wish you good luck.
 
One thing to remember is that life insurance is based on issue age, so canceling now and buying from someone else is likely to have a large increase. For the other insurance, you should get a quote and compare to what you are paying. If it is lower, tell your relative that you are wanting to save money. If he/she can't get you a lower price, then you need to do what is best for you.
 
I think I know who your insurer is and it starts with an F. PM me. Insurance agent. Cyclone fan.

Edit: And yes, generally very little benefit to replacing life insurance policies as you'd be doing so at attained age.
 
Sure, but you can't plan on the day that surprise happens. The premium gets you the guarantee that the money is there at the right time.

That said, I don't have a policy like that for our daughter.


If the policies are actually as cheap as what people here are saying I don't think it'd be the worst thing to do. I just assumed it was gimmicky and the insurance agents used scare tactics and emotions to get you to buy something you don't need.
 

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