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Why Reviewing Your Critical Illness Coverage Is the Smartest Year-End Move
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Before year-end, if we had to pick just one critical financial planning action most people overlook, it would be this:
Review and update your insurance coverage, especially critical illness protection.
Why this tops the list
While debt reduction and legacy planning are vital, the financial shock of a major illness can derail both your savings and long-term plans instantly. Many professionals think their company group insurance or hospital plan is “enough,” yet:
Critical Illness (CI) payouts are for income replacement and recovery, not hospital bills. They give you liquidity to stop work, pay for alternative treatments, or fund caregiving.
Analysis of major CI claims in Singapore suggests that the highest volume of claims occurs in the early 50s (with many happening from the early-40s to mid-60s). (Sources: SmartWealth, WellNex)
Considering the 40s to 50s are peak earning years – when mortgage and family responsibilities are highest – having adequate CI protection ought to be a priority for many of us.
While procrastination lingers, waiting until 60+ to review your CI coverage may mean you are already in the highest-claim age band.
With rising longevity, the probability of facing one or more major health events before age 65 is far higher than most realise. Don’t wait till a health crisis and by then, it will be too late.
What happens if you don’t review it now
A gap discovered after diagnosis cannot be fixed. No insurer will offer coverage once symptoms or investigations start.
Out-of-pocket recovery costs (lost income, home modifications, long-term care) can wipe out years of investment gains.
Your legacy and retirement plans are jeopardised – funds meant for children’s education or future income are diverted to cover today’s crisis.
Year-end action steps
Check your existing CI coverage (personal + group). Aim for at least 3 – 5 years of income as lump-sum protection.
Review your policy expiry and sum assured. Older CI plans may cover only late-stage conditions. Consider upgrading to multi-stage or early CI plans.
Update beneficiaries and ensure nominations are filed (especially for insurance and CPF).
Reassess your protection after any major life change like a new job, new home, additional dependents, or business.
In essence:
Before you chase higher returns or plan your estate, protect your ability to earn and recover. Financial planning is not just about wealth creation – it’s about wealth continuation.
Recently, I was introduced to the concept of micro-retirement, that is the idea of taking intentional, extended breaks from work, ranging from a few months