Mortgage protection insurance,
or MPI, covers your monthly mortgage payments — and only your monthly mortgage payments — if you die. It's meant to protect
your family from having to sell or lose their home due to loss of your income.
Important side note: Mortgage protection insurance is different from private mortgage insurance (PMI), which protects
your lender
and is something you have to pay if you put less than 20% down on a
home. (Mortgage protection insurance, conversely, is a policy you opt to
buy.) PMI basically insures your mortgage lender won't lose all their
money if your stop making payments on the loan.
What is term life insurance?
Broadly, term life insurance is a type of life insurance that covers
you for a set period of time — as opposed to your whole life. That's
permanent or
whole life insurance.
Mortgage protection insurance vs. term life insurance
Given mortgage protection insurance is a type of term life insurance,
the policies fundamentally operate the same way. You buy a policy for a
set period of time, make monthly payments (premiums), and, in the event
of the death, have a death benefit paid out to your beneficiary.
But, beyond that, there are a few big differences between MPI and
traditional term life. The first one we mentioned already: Mortgage
protection insurance only covers your mortgage, while regular term life
insurance covers all of your expenses (up to your coverage limits,
natch'.) What's preventing your family from using the policy's death
benefit for other things, you ask? Simple: That money gets paid directly
to your lender. Under a traditional term life policy, you get to name a
beneficiary.
Also different: Mortgage insurance is tied to the balance on your
mortgage — meaning the death benefit decreases in tandem, even though
there's a good chance your premiums will remain the same. So, yeah,
mortgage protection insurance is usually more expensive than standard
term life. That's also due to the fact that applicants are exempt from
having to take a
paramedical exam.
MPI is what's known as a guaranteed approval policy, meaning you can
qualify without having to go through standard underwriting (read:
medical exam).
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