PolicyZenA rider is an add-on to your life insurance policy that modifies or expands its coverage. Some riders are included automatically at no charge. Others cost extra — sometimes significantly. A few are genuinely valuable. Others are profit centers that benefit your agent more than you.
Here's every major rider, what it does, and the honest verdict on whether it's worth it.
| Rider | What It Does | Cost | Worth It? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accelerated Death Benefit | Lets you access a portion of your death benefit while alive if diagnosed with terminal illness | Usually free | ✅ Yes — always take it |
| Waiver of Premium | Waives your premium payments if you become totally disabled and can't work | Small extra cost (~$5–15/mo) | ✅ Usually worth it |
| Child Rider | Adds coverage for your children under one rider (often convertible when they're adults) | Low (~$5–10/mo for all children) | ✅ Good value |
| Convertibility | Allows converting term policy to permanent (whole/universal) without new medical exam | Usually included in term policies | ✅ Keep it — costs nothing, valuable option |
| Guaranteed Insurability | Lets you purchase additional coverage at specified ages without new underwriting | Moderate extra cost | ⚠️ Situational — valuable if health may decline |
| Accidental Death Benefit | Doubles the death benefit if you die in an accident ("double indemnity") | Low extra cost | ❌ Usually skip — most deaths aren't accidents; buy more base coverage instead |
| Return of Premium | Refunds all premiums paid if you outlive the term | Significantly increases premium (2–3x) | ❌ Skip — the math almost never works in your favor |
| Long-Term Care Rider | Lets you access death benefit early to pay for nursing home or in-home care | Can be significant | ⚠️ Situational — cheaper than standalone LTC policy |
| Spouse Rider | Adds term coverage for your spouse on your policy | Moderate extra cost | ⚠️ Convenient but often cheaper to buy separate policy for spouse |
| Disability Income Rider | Pays monthly income if you become disabled | High extra cost | ❌ Skip — buy a standalone disability policy instead; better coverage, clearer terms |
The accelerated death benefit rider allows you to receive a portion of your death benefit — typically 25–95% — while still alive if you're diagnosed with a terminal illness (usually defined as less than 12–24 months to live). This money can fund care, final expenses, or anything else. It reduces the eventual death benefit paid to beneficiaries, but costs you nothing to have. Always take it.
The convertibility rider gives you an escape hatch: if you're diagnosed with a serious illness during your term and can no longer qualify for a new policy, you can convert your existing term policy to permanent coverage without a medical exam. The premium will be high, but you'll have coverage. Costs nothing to include in most term policies.
Return of premium (ROP) sounds attractive: if you outlive the term, you get all your money back. But the math is brutal.
Riders are listed in your policy document, usually in a section called "Riders and Endorsements" or similar. The declarations page (the summary at the front of the policy) should list all attached riders and any additional premiums charged.
If you can't find your policy documents, upload what you have to PolicyZen and ask "what riders does my policy have?" The AI will identify them from your documents.
Upload your life insurance policy to PolicyZen. Ask "what riders are on my policy?" and get a clear answer from your actual documents.
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