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JG
Expert Reviewed by James Griggs
Licensed Life Insurance Agent | Updated: June 8, 2026
โœ“ Licensed

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Simplified Issue vs Guaranteed Issue Life Insurance: Which Final Expense Policy Is Right for You in 2026?

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Both types of burial insurance promise โ€œno medical examโ€ โ€” but the similarities end there. Hereโ€™s how to choose the one that actually protects your family, not just the insurance company.

Senior couple reviewing <a href=final expense insurance documents at home" width="800" height="533" loading="lazy" />
A senior couple reviews final expense insurance options to protect their family

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If youโ€™ve watched daytime television or checked your mailbox lately, youโ€™ve seen the ads: โ€œYou canโ€™t be turned down!โ€ โ€œNo medical questions!โ€ โ€œNo exam required!โ€ Final expense insurance marketing is everywhere โ€” and for good reason. Funeral costs now average $8,000 to $10,000 nationally, and for families without savings set aside, that bill lands squarely on surviving loved ones at the worst possible moment.

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But beneath the similar-sounding promises, final expense policies break into distinct categories that affect everything from your monthly premium to whether your beneficiaries actually receive the full payout. The two most common types โ€” simplified issue and guaranteed issue โ€” sound interchangeable in advertisements but deliver dramatically different value. Understanding the difference before you buy is the difference between smart protection and an expensive mistake.

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The Real Cost of Final Expenses

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Before we dive into policy types, letโ€™s put the need in perspective. A basic funeral in the United States includes several line items that add up fast:

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Expense Typical Cost Range
Funeral home services (basic) $2,000โ€“$4,000
Casket $1,000โ€“$3,000+
Burial vault $900โ€“$1,500
Cemetery plot $1,000โ€“$4,000
Headstone/marker $500โ€“$3,000
Flowers, obituary, programs $500โ€“$1,500
Total (modest funeral) $6,000โ€“$10,000

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And funeral costs are just the beginning. Outstanding medical bills, credit card balances, and other end-of-life expenses often land on family members who are already grieving. A final expense policy in the $10,000โ€“$25,000 range covers the funeral and provides a buffer for these additional costs โ€” without burdening your children or grandchildren.

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Simplified Issue: The Gold Standard (If You Can Get It)

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Simplified issue final expense is the better product in virtually every way โ€” if you qualify. Hereโ€™s how it works:

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  • No medical exam required. You wonโ€™t visit a doctor or give blood.
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  • You answer health questions. Typically 5โ€“10 questions about major conditions like cancer, heart disease, stroke, or COPD in the last 2โ€“5 years.
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  • Full coverage from day one. If you die one day after the policy is issued, your beneficiaries receive the full death benefit.
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  • Lower premiums. Because the insurer screens for health, they can offer better rates than guaranteed issue policies.
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  • Coverage amounts up to $35,000โ€“$50,000 with many carriers.
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What surprises many people is how lenient simplified issue underwriting actually is. You donโ€™t have to be in perfect health. In fact, you can often qualify with one or more managed medical conditions โ€” high blood pressure controlled by medication, type 2 diabetes that isnโ€™t insulin-dependent, or a history of cancer that was treated more than 2โ€“5 years ago (varies by carrier).

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Industry veterans estimate that roughly 70โ€“80% of applicants over age 50 can qualify for simplified issue coverage when matched with the right carrier โ€” someone whose health questions are most favorable for their specific medical history. This is where working with an independent agent who can shop across multiple final expense carriers becomes crucial.

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Guaranteed Issue: True Acceptance, With a Catch

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Guaranteed issue is exactly what it sounds like: you cannot be turned down for any reason. Period. No health questions. No exam. No review of medical records. If youโ€™re between the eligible ages (typically 50โ€“85), youโ€™re approved.

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The catch โ€” and itโ€™s a significant one โ€” is the 2-year waiting period:

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  • If you die during the first two years of the policy from natural causes, your beneficiaries do NOT receive the full death benefit.
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  • Instead, they receive all premiums you paid, plus 10% interest.
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  • After the two-year period ends, the full death benefit is available for any cause of death.
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  • Most policies cover accidental death fully from day one, even during the waiting period.
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Is this unfair? Not really โ€” itโ€™s the only way insurers can offer acceptance to everyone without going bankrupt. If they paid full benefits immediately to people with terminal illnesses, the premiums would need to be astronomical to cover those guaranteed claims. The waiting period protects the risk pool so healthy people arenโ€™t subsidizing guaranteed payouts for the already gravely ill.

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And even with the waiting period, guaranteed issue isnโ€™t a bad deal for someone with a terminal diagnosis. Where else can you put money and get it back with a guaranteed 10% return in under two years?

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Side-by-Side Comparison

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Feature Simplified Issue Guaranteed Issue
Medical exam No No
Health questions Yes (5โ€“10 questions) No
Full coverage starts Day 1 Year 3 (for natural causes)
Accidental death coverage Day 1, full benefit Day 1, full benefit
Premium (65-year-old female, $10K) ~$42โ€“$55/month ~$55โ€“$70+/month
Maximum coverage $35,000โ€“$50,000 $25,000โ€“$35,000
Policy type Whole life (permanent) Whole life (permanent)
Premium increases? No โ€” level for life No โ€” level for life
Cash value Modest, builds slowly Minimal
Death benefit taxable? No (income tax-free) No (income tax-free)

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The Middle Ground: Graded (Modified) Death Benefit Policies

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Between simplified issue and guaranteed issue sits a third category: graded death benefit or modified policies. These are for applicants who donโ€™t quite qualify for simplified issue but arenโ€™t in such poor health that they need guaranteed issue.

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A graded policy pays a percentage of the death benefit that increases over time:

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  • Year 1: 25โ€“40% of the death benefit
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  • Year 2: 50โ€“75% of the death benefit
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  • Year 3 and beyond: 100% of the death benefit
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Graded policies typically cost more than simplified issue but less than guaranteed issue, and they provide meaningful coverage from the start โ€” even if itโ€™s not the full amount. For someone with a recent health event who expects to live several more years, a graded policy can be the optimal middle path.

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Real Rates: What Final Expense Coverage Actually Costs

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Here are representative rates for a $15,000 whole life final expense policy, simplified issue, non-tobacco:

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Age Female (monthly) Male (monthly)
55 $35โ€“$45 $45โ€“$55
60 $38โ€“$50 $48โ€“$60
65 $42โ€“$55 $55โ€“$68
70 $52โ€“$68 $68โ€“$85
75 $65โ€“$85 $85โ€“$105
80 $85โ€“$110 $110โ€“$140

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Rates are guaranteed to never increase once the policy is issued. Availability and pricing vary by state, and tobacco users pay 20โ€“40% more. Guaranteed issue rates run approximately 20โ€“35% higher than the simplified issue rates shown above.

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How to Get Covered: The Application Process

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Final expense policies are designed for speed and simplicity. Hereโ€™s what to expect:

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  1. Contact an agent or broker. Most final expense carriers work through independent agents who can quote multiple companies.
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  3. Answer health questions (simplified issue only). This typically takes 5โ€“10 minutes over the phone. Questions focus on major conditions โ€” cancer, heart attack, stroke, COPD, kidney disease, HIV/AIDS โ€” usually within the last 2โ€“5 years.
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  5. Receive an immediate decision. For simplified issue, youโ€™ll know right away whether youโ€™re approved. Guaranteed issue is instant approval.
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  7. Make your first payment. Coverage begins once the payment clears, usually within 2โ€“3 business days.
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  9. Receive your policy documents. The physical policy arrives by mail within 7โ€“10 business days.
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Thereโ€™s no waiting room, no lab work, and no nurse visit. The entire process can be completed in under 30 minutes from a phone call.

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5 Mistakes to Avoid When Buying Final Expense Insurance

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  1. Buying guaranteed issue when you could qualify for simplified issue. If youโ€™re in halfway decent health, donโ€™t settle for guaranteed issueโ€™s higher premiums and 2-year waiting period. Try simplified issue first.
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  3. Buying too little coverage. A $5,000 policy might cover the funeral but leaves nothing for medical bills, credit card balances, or a small legacy. Aim for $15,000โ€“$25,000 if your budget allows.
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  5. Assuming Medicare covers funeral costs. It doesnโ€™t. Medicare does not pay for funeral expenses, burial, or cremation. Social Security pays a small lump-sum death benefit of $255 โ€” a fraction of even the most modest funeral.
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  7. Not comparing rates across carriers. Final expense rates can vary 30%+ between carriers for the exact same coverage. An independent broker saves you from overpaying.
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  9. Waiting until youโ€™re sick to apply. The best time to buy is when youโ€™re healthy enough to qualify for simplified issue. Once a major diagnosis hits, your options narrow โ€” and get more expensive.
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The Bottom Line

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Final expense insurance exists for one reason: to spare your family from scrambling to pay for your funeral and final bills during an already devastating time. Itโ€™s not an investment. Itโ€™s not a wealth-building tool. Itโ€™s a simple, straightforward promise: when you die, your loved ones get money โ€” tax-free โ€” to handle what needs handling.

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If your health allows it, always choose simplified issue over guaranteed issue. Youโ€™ll pay less, get full coverage immediately, and leave your family with a clean, simple claim โ€” not a waiting period calculation. If your health genuinely requires guaranteed issue, itโ€™s still a legitimate product that serves its purpose. Just understand exactly what youโ€™re buying and what the waiting period means for your beneficiaries.

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Want to compare final expense rates from top-rated carriers? Get your free quotes now โ†’

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Frequently Asked Questions About Burial Insurance

What is burial insurance?

Burial insurance (also called final expense insurance) is a small whole life policy designed to cover funeral costs, burial expenses, and other end-of-life expenses. Coverage amounts typically range from $5,000 to $35,000.

Do I need a medical exam for burial insurance?

No, most burial insurance policies do not require a medical exam. Many are simplified issue, meaning you answer health questions but skip the physical. Guaranteed acceptance policies are also available for those with serious health conditions.

How much does burial insurance cost?

Costs vary by age, health, and coverage amount. A $10,000 policy for a healthy 65-year-old might cost $30-50 per month. Prices increase with age and health conditions.

Can I get burial insurance if I have health problems?

Yes, guaranteed acceptance burial insurance is available regardless of health. There is typically a 2-year waiting period before full benefits apply, but accidental death is covered from day one.

Is burial insurance worth it?

For seniors who want to protect their family from funeral costs (averaging $7,000-$12,000), burial insurance provides peace of mind. It locks in premiums that never increase and builds cash value over time.

JG
James Griggs
Licensed Life Insurance Agent
James Griggs is a licensed life insurance agent with over 15 years of experience helping families find affordable coverage. He holds licenses in multiple states and is certified in term life, whole life, and universal life insurance products.
Licensed Agent15+ Years Experience50+ Providers
Published: June 7, 2026 | Last Updated: June 8, 2026 | Fact-Checked and Reviewed

James Griggs, Licensed Agent

James Griggs is a licensed life insurance agent with over 15 years of experience helping families find affordable coverage. He holds licenses in multiple states and is certified in term life, whole life, and universal life insurance products. James has helped thousands of clients compare quotes from 50+ top-rated insurance providers. His expertise has been featured in industry publications including Insurance Journal and Life Insurance Magazine.

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