kpipes22 0 #1 August 3, 2009 Just FYI for my brothers and sisters in skydiving. I have been researching (for years), looking for a life insurance policy that would pay benefit to my family in event of accidental skydiving death: I found it. Fidelity Life; $300k death benefit; $30 per month premium. Expensive, but it meets my needs. No physical exam required. Please contact me: kpipes22@dropzone.com for contact info. I get "nothing" for bringing in new clients; and I am not the insurance agent. At first, and selfishly, I thought I might enjoy some sort of value for bringing new clients, but "that ain't happnin." And, I no longer care about that: but I would like to make new skydiver friends and have conversations with folks interested in skydive accident insurance. Who knows, maybe someone else out there will help me find something even better that what I have now! Blue skies to you all. Keith Pipes"You can't overcome weakness by fighting it, or by thinking your way out of it: Evolution doesn't work that way . . . You overcome weakness by leaving it behind you!" ~ Stuart Wilde ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
riggerpaul 1 #2 August 3, 2009 A little general information might make things a lot clearer. Does that $30/month give you a general term life policy that will pay in the case of a skydiving death? Or does it get you coverage ONLY for a skydiving death? When you mention $30, is that dependent on age? I don't mean to have you advertising on this thread, but the answers to these general questions might help us know if we should even bother to bother you. Thanks! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dks13827 3 #3 August 3, 2009 My guess is,,, this is only accidental death insurance Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kpipes22 0 #4 August 3, 2009 Good questions, good points: 1) yes, accidental death-only policy; 2) yes, a term-life-only policy (otherwise no cash-value); 3) policy available to me until I reach 80 years-of-age (I am 56); 4) it is not "specific" skydive policy-only (it is, as said above, accidental-death-only); 5) interestingly, there is exclusion "for airplane pilots learning to fly airplanes;" 6) it could be that someone younger than me "may" enjoy a different/better benefit (maybe the monthly premium would be "lower-for-younger," or, maybe someone younger could get a higher POD (payment on death): mine is $300k, and that's OK for my needs. Good questions. Thanks. Keith"You can't overcome weakness by fighting it, or by thinking your way out of it: Evolution doesn't work that way . . . You overcome weakness by leaving it behind you!" ~ Stuart Wilde ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JohnRich 4 #5 August 3, 2009 Tell us where we can see the contract. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kpipes22 0 #6 August 3, 2009 Gabe Ionescu Americadirect 866-710-0995 xt 9765 gabe.ionescu@americadirect"You can't overcome weakness by fighting it, or by thinking your way out of it: Evolution doesn't work that way . . . You overcome weakness by leaving it behind you!" ~ Stuart Wilde ~ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dks13827 3 #7 August 3, 2009 that sounds like a fair deal, though, to me. protect your loved ones. i pay 70 a month for minn mutual pilot insurance 100k I am 58. but it only pays 50k right now since i no longer have a current faa medical. ( I am not active jumping or flying now either). i am keeping this insurance so that i have something. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites