Life Insurance Medical Exam: What to Expect and How to Prepare
Everything you need to know about the life insurance medical exam: what tests are performed, how to prepare, and tips for getting your best results and lowest premiums.
Life Insurance Medical Exam: What to Expect and How to Prepare
The life insurance medical exam is the step that makes many applicants nervous. You have filled out the application, answered the health questions, and now someone is coming to draw your blood and measure your vitals. What exactly happens, and how can you prepare for the best possible results?
Why Insurers Require a Medical Exam
The exam serves as an objective health assessment that verifies your application information. Insurers use results to assign you to a health class (Preferred Plus, Preferred, Standard, etc.) that determines your premium.
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Without the exam, insurers rely solely on self-reported information, creating adverse selection risk. The exam levels the playing field, allowing lower premiums for healthy applicants. Not all policies require one — simplified issue and guaranteed issue skip it — but fully underwritten policies with exams offer the lowest rates.
What Happens During the Exam
A paramedical professional visits your home or office at a scheduled time. The exam is free (the insurer pays) and takes 20 to 45 minutes.
Vital Signs
- Blood pressure. Normal is below 120/80. Up to 140/90 is acceptable for most standard rate classes.
- Pulse. Resting heart rate. Normal is 60 to 100 beats per minute.
- Height and weight. Used to calculate BMI. Insurers have specific height/weight tables for each rate class.
Blood Sample
One to two vials tested for:
- Cholesterol levels (total, HDL, LDL, triglycerides)
- Blood glucose (screens for diabetes)
- Liver function (AST, ALT, GGT)
- Kidney function (creatinine, BUN)
- HIV and Hepatitis B/C
- Nicotine/cotinine (tobacco use in past 7-10 days)
- Drug metabolites
- PSA (males over 50)
Urine Sample
Tested for protein and glucose, nicotine metabolites, and drug metabolites.
Medical History Interview
Current medications, previous surgeries, family medical history (heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes in parents and siblings), alcohol consumption, exercise habits, occupation, and hobbies.
Additional Tests (High Coverage or Older Applicants)
For policies above $1 million or applicants over 50 to 60: EKG, stress test (rare), or cognitive screening (over 70).
How to Prepare for Your Best Results
48 Hours Before
- Avoid alcohol. Temporarily elevates liver enzymes.
- Avoid strenuous exercise. Can affect blood pressure, heart rate, and enzyme levels.
- Avoid red meat. High protein can temporarily elevate creatinine.
24 Hours Before
- Stay hydrated. Dehydration concentrates blood and urine markers.
- Avoid salty foods. Excess sodium raises blood pressure temporarily.
- Get adequate sleep. Poor sleep elevates cortisol and blood pressure.
The Morning Of
- Fast 8 to 12 hours for the most accurate cholesterol and glucose readings (water is fine).
- Skip caffeine. Temporarily raises blood pressure and heart rate.
- Avoid nicotine if you are a non-smoker who occasionally uses nicotine products.
- Take your regular medications unless your doctor advises otherwise. Skipping blood pressure medication is counterproductive — the insurer sees the medication in your records and expects controlled readings.
- Wear comfortable clothing with easy arm access for the blood draw.
During the Exam
- Sit quietly for 5 minutes before the blood pressure reading.
- Breathe normally. Do not try to artificially lower your blood pressure.
- Be honest. The examiner's notes become part of your underwriting file.
What Happens After
Results go to the insurer's underwriting department. They review your application, exam results, MIB records, prescription history, and medical records. You are assigned a health class and final premium. This takes two to six weeks, longer if additional records are needed.
If Results Are Worse Than Expected
- Request a re-examination. Some insurers allow a second exam for anomalous results.
- Provide additional documentation. Recent normal doctor's records can support reconsideration.
- Shop other insurers. Different companies weight different factors differently.
- Consider no-exam policies. Simplified issue eliminates the exam at higher premiums.
Take the Next Step
The medical exam is nothing to fear. A little preparation goes a long way. Get a free quote to start the process, and use our coverage calculator to apply for the right amount.
For more guidance, explore our life insurance resources or browse options by state.
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