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How Much Life Insurance Do You Need? (2026 Guide)

Updated 2026-05-22 Methodology

How Much Life Insurance Do You Need? (2026 Guide)

Question: how much life insurance do I need

Rate Authority Verdict

For most working adults with dependents, the right coverage range is 10–12× your annual income as a starting heuristic, refined upward by the DIME method if you have significant debt or education costs to fund.

Example: $90,000/yr income × 11 = $990,000 — round to $1,000,000. For a healthy 35-year-old nonsmoker, a 20-year term policy at this coverage level typically costs $30–55/mo.

No-dependents baseline: If you have no dependents (children, non-working spouse, financially dependent parents), your need is dramatically lower — often just enough to cover final expenses ($15,000–25,000) and any co-signed debt.

Estimated cost range: $25–75/mo for $500K–$1.5M coverage, healthy nonsmoker age 30–45

Recommended starting point: Ethos (online application) or Bestow (no-medical-exam options up to $1.5M)

Competitive set evaluated: Ethos, Bestow, Haven Life, Ladder, Policygenius

Why this recommendation

The 10-12× income heuristic

The logic: if your policy pays 10–12× your income, survivors can invest the lump sum at a conservative 7–8% and replicate your income for 15–20+ years — long enough for children to reach adulthood, a spouse to re-enter the workforce, or significant financial restructuring. This is a proven rule of thumb used by CFPs; it’s not precise but gives a number you can act on today.

When to use 10×: Younger earners with modest debt, short mortgage remaining, and few education obligations.

When to push toward 12–15×: High debt load, stay-at-home spouse without recent work history, multiple young children, mortgage with 20+ years remaining.

DIME method — more precise coverage sizing

DIME stands for:

Example DIME calculation:

DIME typically suggests 15–25% more coverage than the 10× rule. The tradeoff: DIME is more rigorous but also more conservative. PolicyChat recommendation: use DIME as the ceiling and 10× as the floor, then choose a policy within that range based on budget.

Life phase adjustments

Early career (20s–30s, no dependents): Minimal coverage — mostly debt coverage + final expenses. Consider a 10-year term for the period when you might acquire dependents.

Family formation (30s–40s, dependents + mortgage): This is the maximum-need window. Use 10–15× income. Term length should cover the years until your youngest child reaches 22–25 and your mortgage is paid down.

Pre-retirement (50s, mortgage nearly paid, children independent): Coverage need shrinks. Consider whether you still need coverage at all, or if existing assets + Social Security survivor benefits cover the gap.

Single-income households

If one partner doesn’t earn income but provides childcare, household management, and other economic contributions — the coverage need for that person is real. Cost to replace those services is estimated at $50,000–100,000/yr. Many single-income families under-insure the non-earning partner.

Employer-provided life insurance

Most employer group life plans cover 1–2× salary. This is rarely sufficient and, critically, it disappears when you leave the job. Treat employer life as a supplement to, not a substitute for, individual term coverage.

Methodology

See our full methodology on life insurance amount. This recommendation is at confidence tier validated.

Get specific quotes for your situation

PolicyChat’s dedicated life insurance flow is in development. For now, the fastest path to a 60-second term quote is direct: Ethos or Bestow.

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