When money is tight, reviewing insurance is sensible but some decisions are harder to reverse than others. This guide explains how to review your cover thoughtfully and avoid unintended long-term consequences.
Rising living costs mean many members are taking a closer look at their finances and insurance is often one of the first things under review.
That makes sense. Insurance premiums are a visible, regular expense, and when money is tight, they can feel like one of the few areas where action is possible.
But insurance decisions, particularly health insurance aren’t always easy to reverse. Reviewing your cover is sensible; rushing to cancel it without understanding the implications can sometimes create bigger problems later on.
Cutting back on subscriptions, utilities, or discretionary spending usually have short-term consequences and where if you later change your mind, can be reversed. Insurance is different.
Some types of insurance like hospital cover, protect you against high-cost, low-frequency events - things you hope never happen, but that can have serious financial consequences if they do.
If you cancel your Health insurance and later change your mind and reapply, you may find that:
That’s why insurance reviews need a slightly different lens than everyday budgeting decisions.
Many people assume they have only two choices: keep everything as it is or cancel completely.
In reality, there may be ways to adjust your cover while retaining core protection, such as:
These options aren’t always obvious from policy documents alone and they’re not always explained clearly by insurers.
This is where speaking with a Monument Financial Adviser can be particularly valuable and this advice is provided at no cost.
A Monument Financial Adviser can help you:
This isn’t about being told what to do, it’s about having the information and perspective needed to make a choice you won’t regret later.
Reviewing insurance during financially tight times is responsible. Doing it without understanding the long-term consequences can be costly.
Health insurance decisions are often time sensitive. The cover you give up today may not be available again on the same terms or at the same cost in the future.
Taking time to understand your options, and getting the right advice, can help ensure any changes you make are deliberate, informed, and right for you not just a reaction to short-term pressure.