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What Is Final Expense Insurance?
Final expense is a small whole life policy designed to cover end-of-life costs — funeral, burial, cremation, outstanding medical bills, and legal fees. Coverage typically ranges from $5,000 to $50,000. Unlike traditional whole life, final expense is simplified issue — no medical exam, no blood work, just health questions.
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How Much Does a Funeral Cost in Florida?
According to the Choice Mutual 2026 / NFDA 2023, the median cost of a traditional funeral with burial in Florida is $8,023. The national median is $8,300. Cremation is less ($3,000–$6,000) but still a significant expense. Final expense insurance covers these costs so your family doesn't have to.
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Guaranteed Issue vs. Simplified Issue
Simplified issue (preferred/standard plans): answer health questions, no exam, immediate full benefit if approved. Guaranteed issue (guaranteed acceptance plans): no health questions at all — everyone qualifies — but has a 2-3 year graded benefit waiting period. Accidental death pays full benefit from day one on both.
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Irrevocable Burial Trusts & Medicaid
In Florida, an irrevocable burial trust funded by a final expense policy is exempt from Medicaid asset calculations. Florida exempts irrevocable prepaid funeral contracts with no dollar cap (Fla. Admin. Code R. 65A-1.712, SSI-Related Medicaid Resource Eligibility Criteria). See Florida guidance. June helps structure these correctly.
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Who Should Get Final Expense?
Final expense is designed for seniors ages 50-85 who want to ensure their funeral and end-of-life costs are covered without burdening family. It's also for anyone who has been declined for traditional coverage due to health conditions — guaranteed issue means no one is turned away. Fixed premiums, coverage for life.
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Florida Consumer Protections
Florida law provides a 14-day free-look period on all life insurance policies — return for a full refund, no questions asked (Fla. Stat. § 627.4554). Carriers must provide policy illustrations showing benefits and costs. State insurance regulators prohibit misleading "burial insurance" advertising that overstates coverage or understates limitations.