by Shala » 10 Jun 2009, 15:29
Whole life is like a bank account, where the bank takes 75% of what you put in. NOT a good savings/investment vehicle.
Yes, you pick your policy amount for both term and whole life. Yes, you have an exam at first, and no, you don't need an exam when your term is up, unless you want to try to get a lower rate. You can buy a term policy for up to 30 years a term. You can buy a "guaranteed renewable and convertable" endorsement on your term policy, which means you'll be able to renew when that term is up (usually 20 to 30 years) WITHOUT an exam. Or, you could convert it to whole life, WITHOUT an exam.
Term is cheaper. Don't be sold on gimicky savings/investments. Decide exactly what you want the policy to DO for you, and buy the product that DOES it.
Whole life, variable life, universal life, they make a LOT more commission for the agent, than term life. That's why so many agents like selling them.