Personal Finance

Term Insurance Riders Decoded: Which Add-Ons Are Worth Paying For?

Choosing the right term insurance riders can strengthen financial protection, but experts advise prioritising adequate base cover and selecting add-ons only if they address genuine risks.

AI Image
The best term plan is not the one with the maximum add-ons. It is the one where every rupee paid has a clear purpose and every benefit protects the family when it matters most. Photo: AI Image
info_icon
Summary

Summary of this article

  • Riders are useful only when they address a real risk in a person’s life. They should be chosen based on one’s occupation, lifestyle, health risks, travel pattern, income dependency and existing insurance portfolio.

  • A Critical Illness Rider pays a lump sum if the policyholder is diagnosed with specified serious illnesses. This can help during treatment, recovery or temporary loss of income.

  • An Accidental Death Benefit Rider provides an additional payout if death occurs due to an accident.

A term insurance plan has one clear purpose, to protect the financial value of an earning member and ensure that the family’s goals, liabilities and lifestyle are not disrupted in case of an unfortunate death. Riders can make a policy more comprehensive, but they should not become a substitute for adequate base cover.

Insurance decisions must begin with clarity, not complexity. Riders are useful only when they address a real risk in a person’s life. They should be chosen based on one’s occupation, lifestyle, health risks, travel pattern, income dependency and existing insurance portfolio.

A Critical Illness Rider pays a lump sum if the policyholder is diagnosed with specified serious illnesses. This can help during treatment, recovery or temporary loss of income. “However, the key is to check whether the benefit is accelerated or standalone. In an accelerated benefit, the payout is adjusted from the base term sum assured. In a standalone benefit, the rider sum assured is paid separately while the base term cover remains intact,” says Manju Dhake, Partner at 1 Finance.

One must also evaluate whether a standalone critical illness policy may be more suitable. A critical illness rider attached to a term plan may terminate once the benefit is paid and may not offer renewability thereafter. A standalone critical illness product, depending on its terms, can provide renewable protection. Buyers should also not get influenced only by the number of illnesses mentioned. What matters is the definition, severity of condition, exclusions, survival period and whether major illnesses are meaningfully covered.

“An Accidental Death Benefit Rider provides an additional payout if death occurs due to an accident. For instance, if the base term cover is Rs 1 crore and the accidental death rider is also Rs 1 crore, the nominee may receive Rs 2 crore in case of accidental death. But this “2X benefit” applies only in specific circumstances and should not be mistaken for overall protection adequacy,” says Dhake.

Before opting for it, ask practical questions: Does the individual travel frequently? What is the daily commute? What mode of transport is used? Is the work environment exposed to chemicals, machinery, hazardous locations or field travel? If accident risk is high, a standalone Personal Accident policy may often be a better option because it can cover not only accidental death, but also permanent disability, temporary disability and income loss, subject to policy terms.

A Waiver of Premium Rider is one of the more meaningful riders to consider. If the policyholder suffers a specified critical illness or disability, future premiums are waived while the life cover continues. This prevents the policy from lapsing at a time when income may be impacted. However, waiting periods, eligibility, exclusions and disability definitions must be checked carefully.

“The leadership principle is simple: do not buy riders because they are inexpensive or sound attractive. First, buy adequate term cover based on income, liabilities, dependents and goals. Then add only those riders that strengthen protection without duplicating an existing policy,” says Dhake.

The best term plan is not the one with the maximum add-ons. It is the one where every rupee paid has a clear purpose and every benefit protects the family when it matters most.

Published At:
CLOSE