Families

What would your family do without you?

We want the best for our families and would do almost anything to help them achieve their hopes and dreams. Yet, with the hustle and bustle of daily life, many people often forget to do tone of the most important things they can do to protect their family’s future: get and maintain the right kinds and amounts of life insurance.

As your family changes through the years, so do your life insurance needs. That’s why a regular review of your life insurance coverage is so important.

Ask yourself:

  • What is the right amount and kind of coverage for you and your family at this stage of your lives?
  • In the last year, have you experienced changes such as a birth, divorce, remarriage, new mortgage, and/or new job? (These are all indicators you might need to change your life insurance policy. And you may be able to save some money too!)
  • When was the last time you updated your beneficiaries? (The beneficiaries named on your policy usually override those listed in your will.)

PJL Financial makes it easier to protect your family without breaking your budget. Click here to request your complimentary life insurance policy review. Your review can help you:

  1. Calculate how much life insurance you really need.
  2. Determine if you have the right kind of coverage for your life stage.
  3. Uncover ways to save money – most consumers overestimate the cost of life insurance by nearly three-fold!

Whether your children are young or getting ready for college, they are depending on your for your love and support. But they are also counting on you financially. Click here to request your complimentary life insurance policy review now.

One-third of Americans would feel the financial impact from the loss of a primary wage earner within a month of the wage earner’s passing

“One-third of Americans believe they would feel the financial impact from the loss of a primary wage earner within a month of the wage earner’s passing. Half say they would feel an impact within 6 months. Younger people say they’d feel the impact sooner than older people.”