कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
The dangers of going for cheap life insurance
Weekend Argus on Saturday
|June 21, 2025
IN this second article on life insurance, I look at level versus escalating premium patterns, why you get what you pay for, and how life cover fits into your long-term financial plan.

Here's a quick recap from last week (“Understand these basics before buying life cover”, Personal Finance, June 14, 2025). Insurance companies price their cover according to the risk you pose of claiming, which is assessed in the underwriting process. There are two levels of underwriting: initially at a generic level, where policyholders with similar attributes are grouped in an underwriting pool; secondly at individual level, where your personal health status is assessed. Premiums are determined according to actuaries’ risk assumptions of the underwriting pool and then adjusted on an individual level if you have specific health issues.
The pricing at pool level is not guaranteed for the life of the policy - policies typically come with a guarantee period of 5, 10 or 15 years, beyond which the risk of the underwriting pool is reassessed, resulting in a possible increase in premiums across the pool.
Premium patterns
Verlyn Troskie, head of retail distribution at Sentio Capital and Certified Financial Planner with a deep knowledge of financial products, explained that insurers have different ways of pricing cover.
With a level premium pattern, there will typically be an inflation-linked annual escalation (of, say, 5%) commensurate with an increasing cover amount. With an age-related premium pattern there will be an additional annual escalation according to a fixed percentage rate related to your age.
Opting for an escalating age-related premium in addition to the inflation-linked escalation makes your initial premium lower, but the compounding effect of this selection could eventually make the premium unaffordable, Troskie says.
यह कहानी Weekend Argus on Saturday के June 21, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 9,500 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Weekend Argus on Saturday से और कहानियाँ
Weekend Argus on Saturday
'SA descending into a state of lawlessness'
EXPERTS warn that South Africa might have lost its grip on law and order and may even have entered a state of lawlessness, with violent crime levels reaching alarming heights. Many cases brought before courts are withdrawn or dismissed, further undermining public confidence in the justice system.
3 mins
August 30, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
SA prepares for tourism boon as season sets in
SOUTH Africa is gearing up for a bumper shoulder tourism season starting on September 1, with tourism bodies across the country preparing for a surge in both domestic and international visitors.
3 mins
August 23, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
No 'funeral vibes' from Boks this time?
RUGBY CHAMPIONSHIP
2 mins
August 23, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
President slams convention boycotters
NATIONAL DIALOGUE
3 mins
August 16, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
Work ahead is demanding, says minister
ACTING Police Minister, Professor Firoz Cachalia, National Police Commissioner, General Fannie Masemola, together with Deputy Ministers Dr Polly Boshielo and Cassel Mathale, welcomed more than 1,900 newly trained constables to the ranks of the South African Police Service (SAPS) at their passing out parade.
2 mins
August 16, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
New AGU head's grand plan to tackle gangs
THE Western Cape remains one of South Africa's most dangerous provinces, alongside Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, when it comes to national murder statistics.
3 mins
August 09, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
SA's wealthy executives increasingly the target of kidnappers
SOUTH Africa's captains of industry are under siege. Experts say an increasing number of CEOs and high-net-worth individuals are being kidnapped by sophisticated criminal enterprises who see them as lucrative targets.
3 mins
August 09, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
A rose for every 115 women raped daily in SA
TODAY, on National Women's Day, 115 red roses will appear across Cape Town, not as symbols of romance, but as silent protests against the violence that women endure.
2 mins
August 09, 2025
Weekend Argus on Saturday
Experts, analysts cautiously optimistic as new police minister assumes office
WITH all eyes on newly appointed Acting Minister of Police, Professor Firoz Cachalia, crime experts and analysts are cautiously optimistic about what his appointment could mean for policing reform and national security in South Africa.
1 mins
August 02, 2025

Weekend Argus on Saturday
World watches as Gaza starves to death
AS GAZA slips deeper into famine amid relentless conflict, mass displacement, and blocked humanitarian aid, horror stories are emerging from mothers desperately seeking food and water for their children.
3 mins
August 02, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size