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5 Things the Insurance Industry Doesn't Want You to Know

5 Things the Insurance Industry Doesn't Want You to Know

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This week's episode is brought to you by: Facet. They provide you with access to a team of fiduciary CFP® professionals who gets paid to help you—not to sell you whole life insurance to fund their boat payment. New year, new financial plan that actually makes sense. Learn more at joinfacet.com/tyler. Copilot Money. The only finance app I've ever recommended to friends unprompted. Three finance professionals signed up, all three stuck around—which tells you everything. If you want to actually organize your money without turning it into a part-time job, check it out at try.copilot.money/tyler. Gelt. I spent six months doing everything right in my business—automated savings, proper accounting, the works—except I forgot to get a tax strategist. Rookie move. Should've been the first call, not an afterthought. If you're running a small business or a high earner, don't make my mistake. Check out joingelt.com/tyler. And on to the show notes! Most of what the insurance industry sells falls somewhere between unnecessary and borderline predatory. That’s not hyperbole. That’s the point of this episode. Here, Tyler breaks down what insurance is actually for, what you truly need, and why so many popular policies are aggressively oversold, misunderstood, or designed to benefit everyone except the person buying them. This is a blunt, behind-the-scenes look at how insurance really works — informed by Tyler’s time inside the finance industry — and why mixing insurance with investing is almost always a mistake. In this episode, Tyler covers: What insurance is meant to do — protect against catastrophic loss, not build wealth The short list of insurance most people actually need Why whole life insurance is a bad deal for nearly everyone How indexed and variable life policies repackage the same problems with more complexity and fees When annuities can make sense, and when they don’t Why HSAs are one of the most powerful financial tools available, if you’re eligible Along the way, Tyler explains how commissions shape “financial advice,” why bad products stick around, and how to spot sales tactics dressed up as planning. This episode isn’t anti-insurance. It’s about using insurance for what it’s good at — transferring risk — and avoiding products that pretend to be investments. And if the show has helped you avoid a mistake — or ask better questions — leaving a quick review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify genuinely helps. Hope this gives you something useful to think about this week.
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