Medical exams are a core part of the life insurance underwriting process. They provide insurers with objective health data used to verify application information, assess mortality risk, and assign underwriting classes. While not all policies require exams, exam-based underwriting often results in more accurate pricing and lower premiums for healthy applicants.
This sub-pillar explains how medical exams work, what insurers evaluate, and how exam results influence life insurance approval and pricing decisions.
Below are the 20 supporting articles for this sub-pillar.
- What Life Insurance Medical Exams Are and Why They Matter
- What Happens During a Life Insurance Medical Exam
- Blood Tests and Lab Results in Life Insurance Underwriting
- Urine Tests and What Insurers Look For
- Blood Pressure and Heart Health in Life Insurance Exams
- Cholesterol Levels and Life Insurance Pricing
- Blood Sugar, Diabetes Screening, and Underwriting Decisions
- Height, Weight, and BMI Measurements in Medical Exams
- How Medical Exam Results Affect Underwriting Classes
- Medical Records and Attending Physician Statements Explained
- Prescription History Checks in Life Insurance Underwriting
- Common Medical Exam Red Flags for Life Insurance
- Preparing for a Life Insurance Medical Exam
- How Temporary Health Issues Affect Exam Results
- Follow-Up Testing and Additional Underwriting Reviews
- Medical Exams for Term vs Permanent Life Insurance
- No-Exam Life Insurance vs Exam-Based Underwriting
- How Age Affects Medical Exam Requirements
- What Happens If You Fail a Life Insurance Medical Exam
- How Medical Exams Impact Long-Term Life Insurance Premiums
Related Guides