Avoid These Mistakes When Buying Endowment Plan
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Endowment plans are basically insurance instruments that offer the added advantage of providing savings options to the investor. An endowment plan offers main plan benefits i.e. sum assured to the nominee(s) of the policy holder in the event of the policy holder’s demise during the policy term and also entitles the policy holder to receive the maturity bonuses in case she/he survives the policy term.
Endowment plans come with the two separate clauses of “with-profit” and “without –profit”. A profit-oriented endowment plan comes with a range of reversionary and terminal bonuses that add to the main sum assured upon maturity of the plan and therefore, offer extra fund benefits. A non-profit endowment plan has no such benefits and can be seen as a traditional life insurance plan. An endowment plan has the beneficial feature of offering lump-sum payouts. This feature encompasses the maturity proceeds as well as the main plan benefits i.e. the sum assured. This means that the policy holder can receive the lump-sum payout of the money upon term maturity and thus, has the option of further investing the funds as and when required. An endowment plan can be purchased as per the required needs and financial goals of the investor and there are no rigid or pre-fixed rules regarding the policy term.
Things To Remember When Buying An Endowment Plan
Following are the five things to know before purchasing an endowment policy:
1. Death along with survival benefits
Endowment plans are unique in the sense that the these plans guarantee the payment of benefits to the policy holder in the event of she/he survives the term of the plan and also entitles her/nominee(s) to receive the sum assured together with other additional bonuses in the event of the policy holder’s demise during the plan term. Therefore, an endowment plan offers death benefits along with policy survival benefits.
2. Returns
The feature of extra bonuses means that the overall returns from an endowment plan tend to be higher than that from any traditional life insurance plan or term insurance plan. Since apart from the regular sum assured, additional payable amounts are combined, hence the plan benefits are higher.
3. Premium-payment frequency
Generally the insurers offering endowment plans offer quite flexible premium-payment terms. This means that the policy holder can pay the premium in a frequency chosen as per her/his convenience. The frequency can be monthly, bi-annual, annual or even a one-time lump sum payment.
4. Flexibility in cover
An endowment plan offers the benefit of flexible coverage and the policy holder can choose to purchase additional benefits in the form of riders like partial/total disability riders, critical illness riders, accidental death riders etc. This impacts the payable premiums but the scope of coverage becomes very flexible.
5. Income Tax benefit
An endowment plan comes with tax benefits because the payable premiums as well as the main plan benefits (sum assured and the maturity proceeds) are eligible for tax-exemption under Sections 80C and 10D of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
Conclusion
If you want to avail most of the benefits of an endowment plan, then you must select the most appropriate plan for yourself.
Also read: Essential Documents That You Must Have For Buying Endowment Plan