adamu wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 12:45 am
That Nissay link is an example of a life insurance company.
My understanding is that whole life insurance policies are not a good deal, because they are basically making investments on your behalf, and keeping a large difference as a fee. Better to do the investment part yourself, and if you need life insurance, get term life for the period where it matters.
In my experience, the types of products offered by insurance companies like Nissay may be referred to as pensions, but the way they work is very different from a state pension that continues to pay out a certain inflation adjusted amount until you die.
Generally you contribute monthly until a set age and then basically just get your money back over the following 10, 15, or 20 years with a slight increase (I don't have the exact figures to hand, but I think I was quoted something like a 20% increase on contributions).
Some advantages of these products might be:
Slightly better returns than just leaving money in a bank account
Tax deductions
Some sort of insurance component (for example, you may no longer have to make the monthly contributions if you become unable to work for health reasons)
Relatively safe so long as the company doesn't go bankrupt
The main issue though is that they don't offer financial insurance against living into you 90s and beyond like a state pension that keeps paying out and don't offer the possibility of a significant return on investment over time like investing in the stock market!