We live in a world of instant gratification. These days, you can order takeout, book a plane ticket, or even find a Friday night date – all with a swipe and a tap on your phone.
Living in the moment is a beautiful thing. But when it comes to financial planning… it’s important to think ahead. Life insurance puts you in control of how you want your legacy to live on. What’s more, it spares your family the stress of scraping by to afford final expenses and pay bills after you’re gone.
ONLINE MEMORIALS: A GROWING TREND
Enter funeral crowdfunding. Websites like GoFundMe (which recently acquired YouCaring.com), FundTheFuneral or DepositAGift let families ask for donations online to cover funeral and burial costs, or to fund other memorial wishes in honor of a loved one who passed.
A 2015 study from the Funeral and Memorial Information Council found that 17 percent of young adults (age 20-39) have crowdsourced funeral/memorial costs online. For adults age 40 and older, the number is much smaller at 4 percent. Still, the trend shows no signs of slowing down. A recent New York Times article reported that memorials are one of GoFundMe’s fastest growing categories, comprising 13 percent of all crowdfunding campaigns on the site in 2017.
Crowdfunding usually isn’t a family’s first choice to pay for final expenses. Often, the circumstances are tragic and unexpected. Many times, donations are collected because the deceased didn’t have life insurance.
Final expenses aren’t cheap. According to the National Funeral Directors Association, the median cost of an average funeral is around $7,000. (That doesn’t include cemetery monument or burial costs, which vary widely by area.)
Crowdfunding might help in a pinch – but life insurance is a reliable, affordable way to plan for the future. And after all, wouldn’t you rather be in control of making that plan yourself?