Element137
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 128
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
I have a question related to this - does anyone know the legal position on whether you should declare T2 after diagnosis if you already have an existing policy running ?- I have life assurance taken out ages ago against a mortgage - diagnosed August 2016 - questioning now whether I need to inform the insurer ?- surely the premium applied is at point of purchase against a known level of risk at that point in time ? - do insurers reserve the right to change premium on information after contract is entered into ? - Whilst I was diagnosed as T2 - I am controlled only by diet, with current non-diabetic Hba1c - I can see how T2 diagnosis would increase risk in the eyes of an insurer, my question is more around the ability of insurers to add premiums after a change in circumstances ?
Certainly was although you can't see in the pic the queue of other people waiting!Thanks all- will have a look ate the policy- I don't want my partner to miss out if anything happens so want to ensure all above aboard - also @bulkbiker - great picture with Dr Fung - must have been interesting meeting him ?
Thank you for that - I am going to go through the policy document the weekend and contact them just to be 100%For term assurance (the sort usually associated with a mortgage), the risk is assessed at the point of application, and the premium applied accordingly. There are a few providers who specify that you must inform them on any changes during the policy term, but they are few and far between. If you were applying for any form of increase to the policy; for a new house, or remortgage, you would be obliged to declare it then (with a few exceptional circumstances).
I would go along with @bulkbiker 's suggestion to read the policy documents, and if in doubt, just give the insurer a call. The time to find you got it wrong isn't at the point of claim.
@Engineer88 - an existing term assurance policy would not normally be re-underwritten on declaration of a diagnosis during the policy term, so I would think in these circumstances there would be a disinterest from the company, but you are correct, that a diabetes diagnosis will usually impact on most life assurance policy premiums, for new policies.
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