Insurance

Protecting you and your family

Life insurance provides a tax-free cash payment to your beneficiaries, helping cover expenses like debts and funeral costs while maintaining their standard of living.

Life insurance


Life insurance is an insurance policy that can help your family maintain their standard of living if you die. It can also help cover debts or expenses such as funeral costs.


Life insurance can also be used to:

Cover estate taxes: When the death benefit is payable to your estate

Save for retirement: By using permanent insurance policies that let you build savings as well as provide insurance protection.

Donate to charity: By making a charity a beneficiary, or the owner and beneficiary, of your insurance policy.

Protect your interest in a business: By providing money to buy out a deceased business partner’s stake in the business.

Types of life insurance


It’s important to get the type of insurance that best meets your needs.


There are two main types of life insurance in Canada:

Term life insurance: Guaranteed for a specific length of time.

Permanent life insurance: Guaranteed coverage for life.

Term life insurance


Term insurance covers you for a specific number of years. It is the lowest cost life insurance you can buy. It’s the most common type of insurance and can meet most insurance needs.

Term insurance provides you with insurance protection for a specific length of time. Policies are generally available for terms 10, 20, 30 or 40 years. But you can’t get coverage after a certain age, typically between 75 and 85.


There are different options of Term life Insurance.

Joint first-to-die - Joint first-to-die term insurance pays a death benefit when the first partner dies. Both are insured under the same policy and receive the same coverage. If one partner dies, the other partner will need to apply for a new policy to continue coverage.

This type of insurance is usually less expensive than 2 identical single policies. It’s also less flexible if you separate or divorce. Very ideal for paying for final expenses and cottage capital when the surviving partner pass away.


Single term insurance provides each partner with their own policy and their own coverage amount. It’s usually more expensive than a joint first-to-die policy. Since you each get your own policy, it’s relatively easy to change the beneficiary if you separate or divorce.




Comparison

Type of life insurance policy

Premiums and coverage time

How this insurance might be used

Term

Insurance coverage guaranteed for a pre-defined term, ranging from, 10 or 20, 30 or 40 years

Premiums stay the same for length of the term

Renewal of term is guaranteed, but at a higher premium rate

Coverage ends at a specified age (often age 75 to 85)

Lowest cost form of insurance at the start, then increases at renewal.

Often used during working years to provide the capital needed to replace income when a key breadwinner dies

Coverage is not guaranteed for life, so may not be appropriate for estate planning goals

Whole life

Permanent insurance guaranteed for life
Premiums stay the same for life


Retirement – savings can be used as loan collateral to provide money in retirement, or withdrawn if you end the policy

Estate – can be used to cover your estate’s tax liability or enhance your estate’s value

Universal life

Permanent insurance guaranteed for life

Premiums are adjustable depending on savings and insurance needs

Policy provides both insurance protection and tax-sheltered savings

Retirement – savings can be used to cover ongoing premiums, increase the policy’s death benefit or used as loan collateral to provide money in retirement

Estate – can be used to cover your estate’s tax liability or add to your estate’s value

Term to 100

Permanent insurance guaranteed for life

Premiums stay the same until age 100, or may in some cases be payable over 20 years

Typically has no savings component or cash value

Lowest cost form of permanent insurance

Pre-retirement – can be used to replace income if you were to die unexpectedly

Retirement – can be used to cover your estate’s tax liability or add to your estate’s value

How to get Insurance


Term insurance offers affordable coverage for a specific number of years, typically available in terms of one, five, 10, or 20 years, and is the most common type of life insurance. While premiums remain constant throughout the term, it becomes more expensive as you age, and coverage is generally unavailable after age 75 to 85. Most policies are renewable, allowing you to extend coverage without a medical exam, though renewal premiums are predetermined in the contract.