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Terminal illness insurance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Terminal illness insurance (known as accelerated death benefit in North America) pays out a capital sum if the policyholder is diagnosed with a terminal illness from which the policyholder is expected to die within 12 months of diagnosis by a physician who specializes in that illness or condition. The payout is still valid even if the insured lives longer than the expected to die period.[1]

It is a form of insurance that is often added to a life insurance policy or a mortgage life insurance policy by the insurance company issuing the policy. Terminal Illness Insurance is not available as a separate insurance policy.

If a life insurance policyholder also has terminal illness insurance, then he/she has the benefit of knowing that if he/she is diagnosed with a serious illness and is expected to die within 12 months of diagnosis, then the combined policy will pay out straight away rather than waiting for the policyholder to die (as would happen if the policyholder did not have terminal illness insurance).

It should not be confused with critical illness insurance. The two forms of insurance are very different.

References

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  1. ^ "Life insurance and cancer". www.cancerresearchuk.org. Retrieved 13 December 2024.

See also

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