Advertisement
I am confused about the layers of covers and how the claims works.
3
Discussion (3)
Learn how to style your text
Josh Tan Jian Liang
08 Nov 2019
Co-founder https://theastuteparent.com at Promiseland Independent Pte Ltd
Reply
Save
Kelly Trinh
07 Nov 2019
Backoffice technical at financial services firm
Worked example - Assuming SA is 100k
If you get a "severe" CI (Layer 2) - you get 300k.
If prior to that payout for severe CI - you get 100k for early/intermediate CI (Layer 1) - it can be up to twice for different things but any payment here is just paying out the Layer 2 earlier.
So for Layer 1 / Layer 2 - max you get is 300k (whether through one severe or some early/intermediate followed by a severe)
Layer 3 and 4 are extra-on-top payouts - so if first CI one of the big common CI (Cancer / Heart Attack / Stroke ) or it is a recurrence - you get 150k (up to twice so total 300k).
As Layer 3 and 4 doesn't depend on what what happens in Layer 1 and 2 - total you can get is 600k.
Is this really confusing - YES. Why is it like this; Aviva is just responding to market practice, all the different companies CI products are complex. Makes it really hard to compare price.
Reply
Save
Elijah Lee
07 Nov 2019
Senior Financial Services Manager at Phillip Securities (Jurong East)
Read 1 other comments with a Seedly account
You will also enjoy exclusive benefits and get access to members only features.
Sign up or login with an email here
Write your thoughts
Related Articles
Related Posts
Related Posts
Advertisement
Hi Honestreview,
I'd try my best to help simplify and explain the layers of coverage with the AVIVA MultiPay CI.
Layer 1 is for Early or Intermediate CI. It pays 100% of the sum assured. It helps you cover your gaps in Early critical illness coverage.
#Note: You can claim for 2 times with no waiting period between pots.
Layer 2 is for CI. It pays 300% of your sum assured (less any payouts from layer 1). It helps you cover your gaps in CI coverage which typicall requires a bigger amount. A guideline will be 5-10x your annual income.
Understanding these 2 layers first is mightily important. If you feel you have CI coverage settled already with other plans, then this layer 2 doesnt have much appeal. Maybe explore other multiple payout CI plans like AIA power critical cover or Singlife plan that can also cover you multiple times for early CI conditions.
https://www.theastuteparent.com/2019/04/singlif...
But if you don't have much CI coverage yet and there is a gap to address, then this plan can be a great fit. It can also be considered against the TM Multicare plan which has similarities in benefits.
https://www.theastuteparent.com/2019/08/multica...
Now moving on to Layer3. There is a 2year waiting period. It is for re-diagnose of cancer, heart attack and stroke if it were already claimed in layer 2.
The term "first-time CI for cancer, heart attack and stroke" is if it was not claimed in layer 2. To explain it, look to understand the "POT" definition of the AVIVA MultiPay CI.
Pot 1: Cancer and illnesses related to major organs
Pot 2: Heart related illnesses
Pot 3: Nervous system and other systemic conditions
An example would be Kidney failure, it will be in POT 1 with cancer. If you'd claimed kidney failure in layer 2, you'd be able to claim under layer3 for this with the 2y waiting period fulfilled.
#NOTE: layer 4 is a similar understanding method for its benefits to you
If in doubt speak, drop me an email to [email protected] or speak to any qualified advisor. Below is an image of the structure of benefits. Hope it helps =)