❤️ Critical Illness Insurance Calculator
Estimate the necessary critical illness coverage and potential annual premium based on your health profile and financial obligations.
🎯 What is the Critical Illness Insurance Calculator?
The **Critical Illness Insurance Calculator** is a dual-purpose financial tool. First, it determines the minimum lump-sum payout needed to cover immediate financial obligations and lost income following a severe health diagnosis (like cancer, heart attack, or stroke). Second, it provides an approximation of the annual premium for that level of coverage based on key health factors like **age** and **smoking status**.
💡 Why You Need This Tool and Its Purpose
Unlike disability insurance (which replaces income) or health insurance (which pays medical providers), Critical Illness insurance provides a tax-free, lump-sum payout directly to the insured. Its purpose is to cover non-medical costs associated with illness:
- **Income Gap:** It replaces lost income when the primary earner cannot work or when a spouse must stop working to act as a caregiver.
- **Debt Relief:** The lump sum can be used to pay off credit cards, auto loans, or other debts, reducing monthly stress.
- **Alternative Care:** It funds treatments, specialized diets, or non-covered travel expenses that health insurance does not address.
⚙️ How This Calculator Works: Needs-Based Coverage & Risk-Weighted Premium
The calculation is divided into two primary parts: defining the needed coverage amount and estimating the cost (premium) of that coverage.
1. Coverage Need Determination ($\text{Coverage}$):
The necessary coverage is the sum of replacement income, existing debt, and projected out-of-pocket medical costs ($\text{M}$) and a buffer ($\text{B}$). $$ \text{Coverage} = (\frac{\text{Annual Income}}{\text{12}} \times \text{Months}) + \text{Debt} + \text{M} + \text{B} $$
2. Annual Premium Estimation ($\text{Premium}$):
The estimated annual premium is based on a baseline rate per thousand dollars of coverage, adjusted by key risk factors: Age, Smoking Status ($\text{S}$), and Health History ($\text{H}$). $$ \text{Premium} \approx \text{Coverage} \times \text{Rate/1000} \times \text{Age Factor} \times \text{S} \times \text{H} $$ Premiums are heavily weighted by age, increasing significantly every five years, and are often doubled for smokers. Our model uses predetermined actuarial factors to provide a plausible estimate.