Over the past 6-12 months, Australians have been feeling the pressure of the increased cost of living due to rises in crude oil, groceries, water, loan repayments, etc. For the first time since the introduction of superannuation in 1986, there has been a massive jump in people taking out their super to meet repayments on their mortgages. Over 55% of all cases involving financial hardship (around 9,000 people) said they needed their super to meet repayments to prevent losing their home.
Cashflow is something that many people struggle with and Life Insurance is something that is usually first on the expense chopping block. Sadly, there have been cases where the client has chosen to cancel their Life policy and a claim arises at a later stage. Life Insurance is the ugly duckling of the finance industry and generally speaking, people don’t want it until they ‘Need’ it.
Did you know that you can fund your life insurance premiums through your superannuation? If you have any old super funds from previous employers, they can be rolled into one fund and the super be deducted from the account balance. With Mortgage Shield, if we were to help with this strategy, we do not charge rollover fees, so the cost is almost the same as using an industry fund. However, the main purpose for doing this is to fund the insurance so the client keeps their cover in place.
To give an example, Mr Anderson is a carpenter and has had several jobs over the years, which has produced a variety of different super funds. He wants life and income protection insurance, but the premiums are around $180 per month, which he cant afford due to mortgage commitments, etc.
As Mr Anderson can’t afford NOT to have this cover in place as he is quite highly leveraged, we decide to round up all of his super funds and roll them all into one fund with Zurich (for example). In the end, he has $20,000 in this fund now that it is all tied together. We start his Income Protection and Life Insurance, which costs $180 per month. But instead of the premiums coming from his bank account, we ‘attach’ it to his superannuation and the premiums are deducted from his account balance.
Mr Anderson now has the flexibility of paying into his super to cover the cost of the premiums, so it doesn’t dwindle away too much, or he can choose to leave it for a few months while his cashflow improves.
There are certain tax advantages that I won’t cover here to save information overload, but see future articles on our BLOG for details.
This now means that Mr Anderson has the appropriate cover in place in the event that he was to die, or be unable to work due to sickness or accident, but has the flexibility that if he can’t afford the premium for whatever reason, he can simply ‘put the payments on hold’ while they come from his super. It’s a great way to keep customer satisfaction while increasing the success rate with client uptake of insurance. Please be mindful that there are only a couple of insurers that are able to use this strategy for administration purposes, which Mortgage Shield has agencies with. This is why it is not widely used.
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