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Understanding Term Life Insurance Options for DuPont Employees: A Guide to Navigating Your Coverage Choices

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What Is It?

Temporary, Pure Insurance

If you are a DuPont employee seeking insurance alternatives, you may benefit from purchasing term life insurance. Term life insurance provides life insurance coverage for a specific time period (term). It is often referred to as temporary insurance or pure insurance, in that there is no cash value in the policy. The face amount of the policy is paid if you die during the term of the policy. As a DuPont employee, it is important to note that for this type of insurance, nothing is paid when you live longer than the coverage term. 

Caution:  Any guarantees associated with payment of death benefits, income options, or rates of return are based on the claims-paying ability of the insurer. Policy loans and withdrawals will reduce the policy's cash value and death benefit.

When Can It Be Used?

High Insurance Need, Low Cash Flow

For DuPont employees, term insurance is appropriate when there is a high need for insurance but not much cash flow to pay for it. For example, a young family with limited cash resources may have a great need for survivor income to provide for living expenses and education needs. Term insurance is especially helpful here, allowing the family to buy insurance protection with minimal cash outlay.

Short-Term Coverage

Term insurance is well suited to cover short-term needs, such as coverage during your working years, the college years, or for the duration of a loan or mortgage. Generally, a short-term need is considered to last 10 years or less and may include coverage for nonrecurring business-debt security, key person coverage in a start-up business, or the young family just starting out. As a DuPont employee it is important to account for this information when in need of coverage or when planning your short-term financial strategies.

Strengths

Low Cost for Large Death Benefit (At Least In Younger Years of Life)

For DuPont employees, term insurance is generally the most efficient way to achieve maximum life insurance protection for a minimum current cash outlay. When you are young and just beginning your career or family, you may have a need for insurance but not much cash to pay for it. You can usually buy a larger death benefit for less cash with a term policy than you could get with any other type of life insurance policy.

Caution:  Term insurance starts out inexpensive when you are young, but the premiums generally increase at each renewal.

Flexible--You Can Buy Policy Based on Various Time Frames And Features

You can buy term insurance coverage for the time period that best suits your needs. Generally, DuPont employees can increase their coverage when their needs change, and renew the policy for an additional period. Increases in coverage may require new proof of insurability.

Policy Type

Feature

Drawback

Annual Renewable Term Coverage for one-year time frame

Policy automatically renewable each year up to specified age

May have limit on number of renewals Premiums may increase with each renewal

Renewable Term Coverage is for a specific period, usually 5 to 20 years

Policy automatically renewable through end of term with no new application or medical exam, even if health has deteriorated

Renewable for same amount of coverage or same term may not be available. Premiums increase with each renewal

Level Premium Term Coverage is for a specific period, usually 5 to 20 years or until a predetermined age

Premium guaranteed to remain same for policy term

Premiums may increase sharply at end of term when new policy must be applied for

Decreasing Term Used to cover mortgage or other debt where balance decreases over time

Premiums remain level, but death benefit decreases each year over term

General insurance needs tend to increase over time due to inflation

Convertible Term

Allows you to convert term policy to another type of policy offered by issuing company

Premiums usually cost more than annual renewable term

Tradeoffs

Premiums Increase At Each Renewal And Get More Expensive With Age

As a DuPont employee, you may want to consider how a term policy has an endpoint, like an expiration date. When the coverage period ends, you may have the option to renew the policy depending on specific policy and limitations. Each time you renew the policy for an additional term of coverage, the rate generally increases because your age (and consequently the insurance company's risk of paying the death benefit) has increased. Eventually, you could be paying more in premiums for term coverage than if you had bought a whole life policy from the beginning. For fortune 500 employees, the increasing premium costs can make term insurance expensive when conducting financial planning for the long-term.

You can start with convertible term insurance in the early years of your career, marriage, or family. When cash is a little less scarce, convert to permanent life insurance such as whole life, universal, variable, or variable universal.

Most Policies Automatically Terminate At Certain Age

Most term policies automatically terminate at a certain age, often 65 or 70, and most people will outlive the term of the insurance. As a DuPont employee, you may want to keep in mind that term policies pay a benefit only when you die during the coverage period. When you live longer than the term of the insurance, your beneficiary receives nothing. There are policies available that are renewable until age 90 or 95. For fortune 500 employees, applying this information is imperative in order to obtain the best coverage option and avoid being left shorthanded.

Some policies also offer a return of premium feature whereby the premiums you paid are returned at the end of the policy term, presuming the death benefit hasn't been paid. If you are a DuPont employee and want a policy where you can be covered for your entire life, consider one of the permanent cash value policies such as whole life, variable life, universal life, or variable universal life.

How to Do It

Determine Your Life Insurance Need And Overall Financial Goals

As a DuPont employee, you need to know how much insurance you need prior to purchasing the policy. Insurance need is based on numerous factors, including your current age and income, marital status, number of incomes in the household, number of dependents, long-term financial goals, level of outstanding debt, and existing insurance and other assets. For fortune 500 employees, your overall financial, estate, and tax-planning goals should be considered as part of your insurance need evaluation.

Tip:  Consult with your financial advisor concerning your need for insurance. Some of the calculations can be complicated.

Complete The Insurance Application And Name Your Beneficiary

Before the insurance company can issue your policy, it must receive a completed application form. For DuPont employees, the application includes general health questions, and the process may include a physical examination, which is usually paid for by the insurance company. A critical part of the application is the beneficiary designation--the naming of the person or persons to receive the policy proceeds when you die. Unless you make an irrevocable beneficiary designation, you can change the beneficiary designation by adding or removing a beneficiary or by changing the percentages of the proceeds distribution.

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Buy The Policy And Pay Your Premium

It is all well and good to know how much insurance and what type of policy is appropriate for your particular situation, but if you don't actually buy the policy, you haven't accomplished your goal! In addition to that, DuPont employees must account for how insurance becomes more expensive with age, meaning delays in policy purchase usually result in unnecessary spending. An additional risk of delaying is that your health could change adversely.

As a DuPont employee, just because you are healthy and insurable today doesn't mean you will be that way later. Deterioration in your health can mean higher premiums or an insurer considering you to be uninsurable.

Review Your Insurance Need Periodically

The amount of life insurance you need may change over time and with the occurrence of lifetime events. Those employed in DuPont companies should periodically review their life insurance coverage. As a rule, you should review your coverage every three years. Major lifetime events (such as the purchase of a home, birth or adoption of a child, marriage, or divorce) are also appropriate times to review your coverage. By routinely checking your insurance need, you can prevent the mistake you can't fix after you die: not having enough life insurance.

Tax Considerations for DuPont Employees

Income Tax

Premium Payments Not Deductible

Life insurance premium payments are generally not tax-deductible expenses.

Death Benefits Generally Not Subject To Federal Income Tax

Policy death benefits are generally not subject to federal income tax. One notable exception is when the policy has been sold or otherwise transferred for valuable consideration by one policyowner to another, subjecting it to the transfer-for-value rule.

Gift And Estate Tax

Policy Proceeds Not Considered Gift to Beneficiary

When the proceeds of your life insurance policy are paid to a beneficiary, they are not treated as a gift for gift tax purposes.

Policy Premium Payments Generally Not Subject to Gift Tax

When you are the owner of a policy on your own life, with another party as the beneficiary, premium payments made by you are not considered a gift to the beneficiary for gift tax purposes. If, however, someone else pays the premiums on a policy you own, of if you pay the premiums on a policy owned by another, the premium payments are considered a gift and may be subject to gift tax. For DuPont employees, policy premiums generally qualify for the annual gift tax exclusion.

Policy Proceeds Included In Estate Value In Some Cases

For DuPont employees, the proceeds of a life insurance policy are included in the value of your estate if you held any incidents of ownership at any time during the three years before your death, or if the proceeds are payable to you or your estate or executor. Incidents of ownership include (among other things) the right to change the beneficiary, take out policy loans, or surrender the policy for cash.

Policy Proceeds Often Exempt From State Inheritance Tax

In many states, life insurance proceeds are exempt from state inheritance taxes.

Questions & Answers for DuPont Employees

If You Are Covered Under a Group Life Insurance Policy Through Your Employer, Do You Still Need A Personal Policy?

As a DuPont employee, you should have your own policy outside the group coverage provided by your employer. The policy through your current employer is more than likely not portable--meaning that when you leave the company, your life insurance coverage will not go with you. It is very common for those in DuPont to change jobs numerous times during their career. Even if you plan to stay with your current job until retirement (assuming your job exists that long), what will you have for coverage afterward? The best way to make sure your family is provided for when you die is to have your own insurance coverage in addition to any provided by your employer. While conversion coverage may be available, it may be expensive and it may offer limited coverage. In addition, it may not meet all of your coverage needs.

Can Your Spouse Own a Policy on Your Life And Name Your Child As Beneficiary?

This can be done, but it shouldn't be. When the insured, the policyowner, and the beneficiary are three different parties (sometimes referred to as the 'unholy trinity' or the 'Bermuda triangle'), the death benefit is subject to gift tax.

Can You Name Your Spouse As The Beneficiary on Your Life Insurance Policy If He or She Is Not A U.S. Citizen?

You can, but there could be estate tax consequences. When your spouse isn't a U.S. citizen and is the beneficiary on your life insurance policy, the death benefit isn't protected by the unlimited marital deduction.

Should You Buy Life Insurance on Your Children?

In some instances it is advisable for those in DuPont companies to buy life insurance on their children, but it shouldn't be done until the appropriate levels of coverage are in place on the lives of the family breadwinner(s), and a spouse is engaged in caring for the children.

Should You Buy Term Insurance or Cash Value Life Insurance?

It depends upon your personal circumstances as a DuPont employee. The first issue to resolve is not what type, but how much life insurance you should buy, and how long your coverage is needed. Once you can answer the quantifiable insurance question, you can move on to the financial aspect. It is possible that the amount of coverage you need as a DuPont employee is so large that the only affordable way to get the coverage is with lower-premium term insurance. If you can afford the needed coverage with either type of policy, then you should think about the financial aspect of which type of policy to buy, considering such factors as your tax bracket and the rate of return you could receive on alternative, similar risk investments.

Is Mortgage Protection Term Insurance Different From Term Life Insurance?

Yes. With mortgage protection term insurance, the policy is designed so that the coverage decreases over time to match the reduction in the amount of the mortgage loan. The premiums, however, remain the same throughout the payment period, which tends to be shorter than the actual coverage period. Level term life insurance policies provide a consistent coverage amount.

Should You Buy Term Insurance And Invest The Difference?

While it sounds good in theory, most people who opt for a lower-premium term policy with the intention of investing the difference between that and a higher premium cash value policy never actually make the investment! First, you must establish that term or temporary life insurance is the best option for you. If you also need to create or continue a savings program for future use, such as retirement or college education expenses, try committing a certain amount to savings in addition to paying life insurance premiums. For DuPont employees, an alternative might be to set up an automatic transfer with the bank, where a fixed amount each month is directed into a savings account or plan. Another alternative might be to buy the cash value policy and take advantage of the forced savings built into the premiums for a cash value policy.

Should You 'Invest' In Insurance?

As a DuPont employee, it generally isn't a good idea to buy insurance unless you need it. If you want to invest money, many options are available. When you need insurance, there are policy types available that can serve the dual purpose of insurance protection and cash value investments. The bottom line is, don't buy insurance because you are looking for an investment--buy insurance because you need the protection.

What are the options available for retirement plans at the company, DuPont, and how do these options cater to different employee needs when it comes to financial security in retirement? Additionally, can you discuss any recent updates to DuPont's retirement benefits that align with current IRS regulations for 2024?

Retirement Plan Options at DuPont: DuPont offers a variety of retirement plans, including a defined benefit pension plan and a 401(k) plan with company match, to cater to different employee needs. These options allow employees to select plans that align with their long-term financial security goals. Recent updates to DuPont's retirement benefits ensure compliance with IRS regulations for 2024, such as the updated contribution limits for 401(k) accounts.

How does the performance of DuPont's pension fund affect the overall pension benefits provided to the employees? In what ways does DuPont ensure transparency and proper communication regarding the management of these funds to its employees as they approach retirement?

Pension Fund Performance Impact: The performance of DuPont's pension fund significantly impacts the pension benefits employees receive. DuPont manages the fund with a focus on long-term stability and provides regular updates to employees regarding fund performance and any changes in benefits as they approach retirement. The company ensures transparency through annual reports and meetings, allowing employees to stay informed.

What are the implications of a change in control for DuPont employees, particularly regarding pension and retirement benefits? How does the company define "Change in Control," and what mechanisms are in place to protect employee interests during such transitions?

Change in Control Implications: In the event of a "Change in Control," DuPont defines this as any significant corporate event such as mergers or acquisitions that results in new ownership or management. The company has mechanisms in place to protect employee pension and retirement benefits, ensuring that accrued benefits remain secure, even during such transitions​(DuPont_2020_Proxy_State…).

Can you outline how DuPont compares its compensation and retirement benefits packages against industry standards? What peer benchmarking processes does DuPont utilize, and how do these comparisons inform changes to employee benefits for retirement?

Benchmarking Compensation and Benefits: DuPont regularly compares its compensation and retirement benefits against industry standards through a peer benchmarking process. This process involves analyzing data from similar companies to ensure competitiveness, which helps inform any necessary adjustments to maintain employee satisfaction and retention.

How does DuPont support employees who are considering transitioning into retirement? Discuss specific programs or resources that DuPont has established to aid employees in preparing for their retirement both financially and personally.

Support for Retirement Transition: DuPont provides several resources to assist employees transitioning into retirement. These include financial counseling, workshops on retirement planning, and access to retirement account management tools. The company also offers programs aimed at helping employees prepare emotionally and financially for life after work.

What ongoing education or resources does DuPont offer its employees regarding retirement planning, particularly in regard to understanding the different types of retirement savings accounts, including those that comply with IRS regulations for retirement savings in 2024?

Ongoing Retirement Education: DuPont offers ongoing education to help employees understand the different types of retirement savings accounts available, including those that comply with IRS regulations for 2024. This includes workshops, online resources, and personalized financial planning sessions to ensure employees are well-informed about their retirement options.

How does the company address the needs of employees who may wish to retire early versus those aiming for traditional retirement ages? Discuss specific policies that DuPont has in place to accommodate different retirement timelines while ensuring fairness and accessibility of benefits.

Early vs. Traditional Retirement: DuPont accommodates employees seeking early retirement by offering phased retirement options and ensuring that pension and 401(k) benefits remain accessible. For those retiring at traditional ages, DuPont's policies ensure a seamless transition, with flexibility built into the benefits structure to support different timelines.

What role does the employee's individual retirement account (IRA) play in conjunction with DuPont’s offered retirement plans? Can you explain how DuPont encourages employees to utilize IRAs in their overall retirement savings strategy and the potential tax advantages for 2024?

IRAs and DuPont Retirement Plans: DuPont encourages employees to integrate individual retirement accounts (IRAs) into their overall retirement strategy. By doing so, employees can take advantage of additional tax benefits, such as deferred taxes on contributions in 2024, while complementing their company-sponsored retirement plans​(DuPont_2020_Proxy_State…).

How does DuPont handle the integration of new benefits, particularly those related to retirement and pensions, following mergers or acquisitions? What procedures are in place to ensure a seamless transition that retains employee benefits?

Mergers and Acquisitions Impact on Benefits: During mergers or acquisitions, DuPont follows a structured approach to integrating new benefits, particularly regarding pensions and retirement plans. The company ensures that employees’ existing benefits are preserved and provides clear communication to address concerns about any changes.

How can DuPont employees reach out to the Human Resources department for more information regarding their retirement benefits? Specifically, what channels are available, and what can employees expect in terms of support and guidance during their retirement planning process?

Reaching HR for Retirement Information: DuPont employees can reach out to Human Resources through several channels, including a dedicated retirement benefits hotline, email support, and in-person consultations. HR provides personalized guidance and helps employees navigate the various stages of retirement planning with access to relevant tools and resources.

With the current political climate we are in it is important to keep up with current news and remain knowledgeable about your benefits.
DuPont offers a comprehensive retirement plan that includes both a pension plan and a 401(k) plan, known as the DuPont Retirement Savings Plan (RSP). Employees are automatically enrolled in the 401(k) plan 60 days after hire, contributing 6% of their eligible pay, which is fully matched by DuPont. Additionally, DuPont contributes an extra 3% of eligible pay to the plan, bringing the total annual contribution to 9%. Employees become vested in the company's matching contributions immediately, while the additional 3% becomes vested after three years of service. DuPont's 401(k) plan provides options for before-tax, Roth, or after-tax contributions, with a combined annual maximum contribution of $69,000 (or $76,500 if the employee is 50 or older). The plan also offers a variety of investment options, including a core investment menu, target retirement funds, and personalized online investment advice through Advice Access.
Restructuring and Layoffs: In 2023, DuPont announced a significant restructuring plan aimed at streamlining operations and focusing on high-growth areas. The company indicated that this plan would involve substantial layoffs across various divisions, particularly in its electronics and industrial segments. This move is part of a broader strategy to optimize operational efficiency and improve financial performance. Benefit Changes: Alongside the restructuring, DuPont also made notable changes to its employee benefits program. The company reduced its pension plan contributions and adjusted its 401k matching policies. These changes reflect a shift in how the company manages its employee benefit costs amidst economic uncertainties and evolving investment strategies.
Stock Options and RSUs: 2022: DuPont's stock options and RSUs are generally available to key employees, executives, and other high-level contributors based on performance and role. 2023: The company continues to offer stock options and RSUs, focusing on incentivizing senior executives and critical talent within DuPont. 2024: Stock options and RSUs remain integral to DuPont's compensation strategy, with new grants based on individual performance and market conditions.
Official Website: Start by checking DuPont's official website for their employee benefits section. Company Filings and Reports: Look at their annual reports, SEC filings, or any specific benefits reports. News Outlets: Search recent news articles or press releases related to DuPont’s employee benefits and healthcare. HR and Benefits Sites: Consult websites that specialize in employee benefits information or compensation data, like Glassdoor or Payscale. Professional Networks: Check platforms like LinkedIn for insights shared by current or former employees.
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For more information you can reach the plan administrator for DuPont at 974 Centre Rd Wilmington, DE 19805; or by calling them at (302) 774-1000.

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