Guaranteed Issue vs Simplified Issue: Which One Should You Buy?
By Diane Whitfield, Final Expense Insurance Specialist · Published May 12, 2026
Almost every final expense decision comes down to one fork in the road: simplified issue or guaranteed issue. Choose wrong and you either overpay by hundreds of dollars a year or get stuck in a waiting period you did not need. Choose right and you get the most coverage your health allows for the least money. The good news is that the choice is not complicated once you see how the two products actually differ.
The short answer
If you can pass a short health questionnaire, buy simplified issue — it is cheaper and usually covers you in full from day one. If your health history rules that out, buy guaranteed issue — it accepts everyone with no questions, at a higher price and with a two-year waiting period. The deciding factor is your health, not your age or budget.
How they compare
| Feature | Simplified Issue | Guaranteed Issue |
|---|---|---|
| Health questions | A few knockout questions | None |
| Medical exam | No | No |
| Waiting period | Usually none — day-one coverage | 2 years on natural death |
| Cost for $10k | $25–$90 / mo | $40–$120 / mo |
| Acceptance | If you pass the questions | Guaranteed for all ages 45–85 |
| Best for | Reasonable health | Serious health history |
When simplified issue wins
Most people are healthier than they assume in the eyes of a final expense underwriter. The knockout questions target a specific short list — active cancer treatment, congestive heart failure, dialysis, oxygen use, HIV, recent stroke. If none of those apply, you likely qualify for simplified issue with full coverage starting immediately. Managed conditions such as controlled diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or a heart attack several years back usually do not block approval. For this group, guaranteed issue would mean paying more and accepting a waiting period for no reason.
When guaranteed issue is the right call
Guaranteed issue earns its higher price for people who genuinely cannot pass the questions: someone on dialysis, using oxygen, in a nursing home, recently diagnosed with cancer, or awaiting a transplant. For them it is often the only coverage available, and the two-year waiting period is a fair trade for guaranteed acceptance. Buying it when you could have qualified for simplified issue, though, is simply leaving money on the table.
The mistake I see most
People talk themselves into guaranteed issue because they are nervous about being declined. Then they pay a guaranteed-issue price and sit through a waiting period they never needed. The fix is to apply for simplified issue first — a good agent screens your health across carriers before submitting, so a likely decline never becomes an actual one. You only drop to guaranteed issue if the questions truly rule you out.
My final advice
Start with the assumption that you might qualify for simplified issue, because more people do than expect to. Have an agent run your health snapshot against a few carriers, and let the questions — not your nerves — decide. If they clear you, take the cheaper day-one coverage. If they do not, guaranteed issue is there as the guaranteed backstop it was designed to be.