What is the catch?

Agent16

New Member
7
I ran into a policy that the insured has had since 2009, when she was 67 (she is now 76). It is a Principal Universal Life Protector III product which I believe is a GUL. She did not put any money into this policy aside from the premiums she has been paying. She has been paying $88 per month since she got the policy for $50,000 of coverage.I called Principal and verified these details with a customer service rep as well as her supervisor. Both of them also told me that the $88 is guaranteed to provide $50,000 of coverage until she is 121 years old. I asked this several different ways as it didn't add up to me and they assured me that if she pays $88 per month for the rest of her life, she will always have $50,000 of coverage. I can only get a 67 year old about $20,000 of final expense coverage for that premium amount. I understand that GULs don't really build cash value, but it seems very strange to me that the cost of insurance (currently $93) is already above her monthly premium. What am I missing? She has put less than $10,000 into a $50,000 policy and will never have a premium increase despite the COI already being lower than her premium.
 
So, Goillini52, you can call and ask about any of my financial arrangements, and I can call about any of yours, then. When I call and access your life insurance carrier, I assume you don't mind if I borrow against it to buy a new RV?
Yes Mark, I can call and get your info from the company....with your permission. :yes:

No Mark, you can't call and get my info because I won't give you permission (has nothing to do with the size of your head). :no:

I think the OP was with the prospect when he called Prudential. :)
 
Yes Mark, I can call and get your info from the company....with your permission. :yes:

No Mark, you can't call and get my info because I won't give you permission (has nothing to do with the size of your head). :no:

I think the OP was with the prospect when he called Prudential. :)

I thought you were going to say, "Yes you can call Prudential and ask about your neighbor's policy. Just don't expect Prudential to give you any information about it - or even tell you if your neighbor has a policy with them. :jimlad:"
 
I ran into a policy that the insured has had since 2009, when she was 67 (she is now 76). It is a Principal Universal Life Protector III product which I believe is a GUL. She did not put any money into this policy aside from the premiums she has been paying. She has been paying $88 per month since she got the policy for $50,000 of coverage.I called Principal and verified these details with a customer service rep as well as her supervisor. Both of them also told me that the $88 is guaranteed to provide $50,000 of coverage until she is 121 years old. I asked this several different ways as it didn't add up to me and they assured me that if she pays $88 per month for the rest of her life, she will always have $50,000 of coverage. I can only get a 67 year old about $20,000 of final expense coverage for that premium amount. I understand that GULs don't really build cash value, but it seems very strange to me that the cost of insurance (currently $93) is already above her monthly premium. What am I missing? She has put less than $10,000 into a $50,000 policy and will never have a premium increase despite the COI already being lower than her premium.
If she was healthy, GUL is going to be much less expensive than an FE product with 4+ tables built in.

COI plays much less of a role in GUL because of the no lapse guarantee rider.

I'm not in a position to check but Principal's GUL is competetive and that pricing doesn't sound too crazy with a favorable health rating.
 
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