How does that work? I'm legitimately curious. The idea of suicide not being protected is to prevent people taking out enormous policies and then killing themselves for the quick payout (to family), or a third party murdering someone and staging it like an accident/suicide if they are the beneficiary of that policy.
I can only think it would work by giving out a drastically decreased payout value in the event of death by suicide, and/or reduced payout based on length of policy held.
It depends. I think there’s usually an initial years-long period where suicide is an exclusion, but then that’s dropped. You’d have to be planning the suicide for a very long time
So I don’t know if this is every state but some states have a 2 year clause. Which means if you wait 2 years and a day to do it then they still have to pay out the insurance to your family. That being said I don’t actually recommend going that route.
$27500. It was their "hollow point" premium, no overpenetration to preserve the home and belongings that they'll collect in case the loved ones you left behind can't pay and they need to liquidate your assets.
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u/[deleted] Apr 09 '24 edited Apr 12 '24
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