Anonymous wrote:You're getting it backwards, though. You take out life insurance on someone to protect you in case of their death. So, like, you get one on your husband because you'd lose out on a big part of household income were he to die.
But (knock wood, etc etc) if your mom were to die, you'd gain. You aren't counting on her to contribute to HHI, right? So no need for life insurance. Sounds like what you should do instead is take out insurance on yourself with her as the beneficiary should something happen to you, and she no longer has you to support her, I think.
Unless you're just looking for a windfall in the case of her death? Or is there other info I'm missing here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're getting it backwards, though. You take out life insurance on someone to protect you in case of their death. So, like, you get one on your husband because you'd lose out on a big part of household income were he to die.
But (knock wood, etc etc) if your mom were to die, you'd gain. You aren't counting on her to contribute to HHI, right? So no need for life insurance. Sounds like what you should do instead is take out insurance on yourself with her as the beneficiary should something happen to you, and she no longer has you to support her, I think.
Unless you're just looking for a windfall in the case of her death? Or is there other info I'm missing here?
Op wants something to pay for the funeral. Those are expensive….
Anonymous wrote:You're getting it backwards, though. You take out life insurance on someone to protect you in case of their death. So, like, you get one on your husband because you'd lose out on a big part of household income were he to die.
But (knock wood, etc etc) if your mom were to die, you'd gain. You aren't counting on her to contribute to HHI, right? So no need for life insurance. Sounds like what you should do instead is take out insurance on yourself with her as the beneficiary should something happen to you, and she no longer has you to support her, I think.
Unless you're just looking for a windfall in the case of her death? Or is there other info I'm missing here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't take out a life insurance policy on another person without their knowledge. She'll have to sign on the dotted line....
You are wrong.
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/stranger-owned-life-insurance-stoli.asp
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate-owned_life_insurance_in_the_United_States
http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-policy/Documents/ChOLI-Report-4-2010.pdf
Anonymous wrote:I couldn't get one on my ex without him signing for it.He said he won't drop dead any time soon so I decided I didn't want to waste my money. Darn him.