Whether you choose permanent life insurance or term life insurance, you will need to go through the underwriting process. This process is how the insurance company determines your insurability — deciding how much of a risk you are and how much of a death benefit you qualify for.
It collects information about your health, job, income, finances, and other personal information to determine how much it will insure you and what your premium will be.
If you have no previous life insurance policy in effect, some insurance companies provide conditional or temporary life insurance until the underwriting process is complete.
What is a life insurance medical exam
Traditional insurance policies require a medical exam, which includes the collection of a blood and urine sample, as part of the underwriting process. The underwriting process can take 4-6 weeks or longer.
People with certain pre-existing health conditions may be ineligible for traditional life insurance — they should consider no medical exam life insurance.
What happens during a life insurance medical exam
The insurance company sends a paramedical professional to your home or business to perform the exam. The medical exam, also known as a paramedical exam, can take up to 30 minutes and usually includes a blood and urine sample, weight, and blood pressure screening.
It is recommended that you fast before the exam, so early appointments are best — otherwise, you’ll have to fast most of the day for an afternoon appointment. Your samples are sent to a lab and you are given a code to check the results.
If you have health issues like high blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, or a family history of cancer or
heart disease, the insurance company may request your health records from your attending or primary care physician. This will make the underwriting process longer as the insurance company waits to receive your medical records from your doctor and review them. If your medical records indicate other health concerns, expect follow-up calls from the insurance company.
Why should you get a life insurance medical exam
Not knowing your medical history means the insurance company is taking a gamble on your health. As a result, death benefits for no medical exam life insurance are limited, typically with a more expensive premium than insurance with a medical exam, and for a limited term — no more than 20 years.
Getting a medical exam helps lower your premiums because the underwriting process can better determine your level of risk.
Be truthful on your life insurance application
It is important to answer truthfully on your life insurance application because if it is discovered that you lied on the application or failed to disclose important facts, the insurance company can invalidate the policy, and your beneficiaries will not receive your death benefit.
In your initial life insurance application, you are typically asked if you have heart disease, high blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, smoker, felony record, or mental illness. If you answer yes to any of these questions, you should expect a follow-up call or additional questionnaire about your family medical history before your medical exam is scheduled.
If you answer no to the initial medical questions, you will receive an email or phone call from a representative to schedule your medical exam. The exam is paid for by the insurance company as part of the underwriting process.
Life insurance premiums are based on your health risk
Based on your medical exam, you are assigned a risk assessment category. Once your risk is assessed, your premiums are calculated based on your risk and you are issued a policy.
Here’s an overview of the different risk classifications used by insurance companies:
Risk Classification | Definition |
Preferred Plus/Elite | Excellent health without any big risk factors for coverage will most likely end up rated at Preferred Plus, giving them the lowest possible premium payment. |
Preferred | Excellent health but may have some subtle red flags, but will enjoy low premiums. |
Standard Plus | Above-average health, but some things may be outside the ideal range. You will have low premiums just not as low as Preferred or Preferred Plus. |
Standard | Normal risk and insurable at standard rates. |
Substandard | Impaired risk deemed undesirable due to medical condition or hazardous occupation requiring a higher premium charge. |
Smoker | Higher risk because nicotine negatively affects health and impacts life expectancy. Will pay more than non-smokers. Some companies separate cannabis users from tobacco users. |
Data sourced from NAIC and Quotacy
Alternatives if you are denied coverage based on the medical exam
If you are denied life insurance coverage for health reasons, consider these alternatives:
1. Group life insurance: A term life policy offered by employers to employees. That means that all employees are accepted. One disadvantage of employer-provided group life insurance is that if you leave your job (resign, retire, or are terminated), you lose your coverage.
2. No medical exam life insurance: A policy with a low death benefit and sometimes a two-year waiting period before paying out to beneficiaries. Check the guaranteed and simplified issue no medical exam policy mailers that might arrive in your mailbox from AARP, Colonial Penn, or Mutual of Omaha.
3. Annual renewable term life insurance: Short-term coverage. A one-year policy is cheap compared to a traditional term life policy. It is renewed at the end of each year, and your premium usually increases as you age. Although your premium may increase each year based on your age, you will not have to have a medical exam every time you renew, according to Fidelity Life.
4. Final expense insurance: A type of guaranteed issue policy that can be term or whole life, with a low death benefit that covers funeral and burial expenses.
5. Find life insurance companies that specialize in “high risk” applicants. This will require some work and research because “high-risk” can mean you are a smoker, felon, or have health issues.
Final Expense | Guaranteed Issue | Simplified Issue |
A type of guaranteed issue policy with a low death benefit that covers funeral and burial expenses | No medical exam and for those 50 years old and older. Coverage up to $25,000 | No medical exam with no age limit, but you still have to complete a health questionnaire. Coverage up to $100,000 |