The Financial Protection Most Homeowners Don't Think About
When most people think about protecting their home, they think about their mortgage payments, their home insurance, and their property value. But there is a critical layer of financial protection that far too many homeowners overlook entirely - and it has nothing to do with the walls of your house. It has to do with your ability to keep paying for it.
In a recent episode of The Divorce Circle podcast, host Sabeena Bubber sat down with Rosy Jallad, a financial and insurance advisor at BMI Advisory Services, to discuss the piece of the financial puzzle that most people do not think about until it is too late: insurance planning. Whether you are a first-time homeowner, carrying a mortgage into retirement, or rebuilding your financial life after a major transition, understanding how to protect your income and your assets against illness, disability, or sudden life changes is essential.
Why Insurance Planning Is a Critical Part of Your Long Term Financial Strategy
Your mortgage is likely the largest financial commitment you will ever make. But most homeowners focus exclusively on the mortgage itself - the rate, the term, the amortization - without asking the more important question: what happens to my mortgage if something happens to me?
If you become disabled, critically ill, or pass away unexpectedly, the financial consequences for you and your family can be devastating. Your mortgage does not pause because life does.
"Illness, disability, and sudden life changes can dramatically alter financial plans - especially during major transitions." - Rosy Jallad, BMI Advisory Services.
This is where strategic insurance planning comes in. It is not just about leaving money behind - it is about protecting your income and ensuring your long-term financial stability while you are still living. For homeowners, this protection is not optional. It is foundational.
3 Types of Insurance Every Homeowner Should Review
Whether you are buying your first home, renewing your mortgage, or planning for retirement, these are the three key areas of insurance coverage to evaluate:
1. Disability Insurance: Protecting Your Greatest Asset
Many homeowners assume their greatest asset is their home. In reality, your greatest asset is your ability to earn an income - because without it, you cannot keep your home. If an illness or injury prevents you from working, disability insurance replaces a portion of your income, ensuring you can still make your mortgage payments, fund your retirement, and support your family. Relying solely on employer-provided group benefits is often a mistake, as these policies may not provide sufficient coverage or remain portable if you change jobs or become self-employed.
2. Critical Illness Insurance: Surviving the Unexpected
A critical illness - such as cancer, a heart attack, or a stroke - comes with massive hidden costs that extend well beyond medical treatment. Even with Canada's healthcare system, you may face expenses for specialized treatments, travel, or simply the cost of living while you take time off work to recover. Critical illness insurance provides a tax-free lump sum payment that you can use however you see fit - including keeping up with your mortgage payments - giving you the financial breathing room to focus on healing rather than stressing about bills.
3. Life Insurance: Securing Your Family's Home and Future
If you have a mortgage, life insurance is non-negotiable. If the primary income earner in your household passes away, the mortgage does not disappear - but the income to pay it might. A properly structured life insurance policy ensures that your family can stay in their home and that your financial obligations are met. Rosy Jallad also highlights the value of whole life insurance policies, which not only provide a death benefit but can build cash value over time, serving as a powerful tool for long-term financial and tax planning.
Common Insurance Mistakes Homeowners Make
- Forgetting to update beneficiaries: An outdated beneficiary designation can mean your insurance payout goes to the wrong person - or creates a legal dispute. Review and update all beneficiary designations whenever your life circumstances change.
- Cancelling policies too soon: Letting coverage lapse before securing a new policy leaves you vulnerable during the gap. Keep existing policies active until your new, individual coverage is fully approved and in force.
- Relying only on mortgage life insurance from your lender: Lender-provided mortgage insurance covers the bank, not your family. The payout goes directly to the lender, not to your loved ones. Work with an independent insurance advisor to structure a policy that protects your family - not just the bank's interest.
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