Term Insurance Calculator

Fill in your details below
to calculate your premium

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Age
Your current age
28 yrs
18 30 40 50 65
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Gender
Affects mortality rate
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Annual Income (USD)
Gross annual income (USD)
$
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Policy Term
Coverage duration (years)
25
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Smoker
Tobacco / Cigarettes usage
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Alcohol Drinker
Regular consumption
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BMI Category
Normal Weight
Normal
Under Normal Overweight Obese
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Occupation Risk
Work environment
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Regular Exercise
3+ times per week
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Pre-existing Illness
Diabetes, BP, Heart etc.
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Coverage Type
How to determine sum assured
Estimated Monthly Premium
$
Low Risk
Annual Premium
$
Sum Assured
Policy Term
Premium Rate
Health Risk Profile
Low Risk Moderate High Risk
Low Risk
0% loading
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Profile
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Base Premium Rate
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Lifestyle Loading
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Sum Assured
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Coverage Until Age
Premium Factors
Age
Coverage
Lifestyle
Term Length
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Save Tax Under IRS
Premium eligible for $1.5L deduction

This calculator provides an estimate based on standard actuarial tables. Actual premium may vary. For accurate quotes, consult a certified insurance advisor. For illustrative purposes only.

Term Insurance Premium Calculator — FAQ
📋 Frequently Asked Questions

Everything About Our
Term Insurance Calculator

Clear, honest answers about how our premium estimator works, what factors affect your quote, and how to make the most of your coverage.

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Questions Answered
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Term Insurance Basics
What it is and why you need it

Term insurance is the simplest, most affordable form of life insurance. You pay a fixed premium for a set period (the “term” — usually 10 to 40 years). If you pass away during that term, your beneficiaries receive the full death benefit (sum assured) tax-free. If you outlive the policy, no payout is made.

Unlike whole life or universal life insurance, term insurance has no cash value or investment component — which is exactly why it’s so affordable. It’s pure protection.

💡Rule of thumb: Term insurance is ideal for anyone with dependents, a mortgage, or financial obligations they couldn’t cover if they were gone.

Term insurance is essential for:

  • Parents with young children — ensures your family’s living expenses and education costs are covered
  • Homeowners with a mortgage — your family won’t lose their home if you die
  • Primary breadwinners — replaces lost income for dependents
  • Business owners — protects business continuity and key-person risk
  • Anyone with debt — student loans, car loans, personal loans don’t transfer to loved ones
You likely don’t need it if you’re single, debt-free, have no dependents, and have substantial savings — but even then, locking in low rates while young can be wise.
FeatureTerm InsuranceWhole Life
Coverage periodFixed term (10–40 yrs)Lifetime
Monthly costVery low ($15–$80)High ($150–$600+)
Cash valueNoneYes (grows slowly)
Death benefitFixedFixed or growing
Best forIncome replacementEstate planning
FlexibilityHighLow
🏆Most financial advisors recommend: Buy term, invest the difference. A $1M 20-year term policy may cost $30/month. The equivalent whole life could cost $500+/month.

The best time to buy is as early as possible — ideally in your 20s or early 30s. Premiums are locked in at the rate you qualify for when you apply. A healthy 25-year-old might pay 60–70% less than a 45-year-old for the same coverage.

Age at PurchaseEst. Monthly Premium*Vs Age 25
Age 25~$18/mo
Age 30~$22/mo+22%
Age 35~$30/mo+67%
Age 40~$46/mo+156%
Age 45~$74/mo+311%

*$500K, 20-year term, non-smoker male in good health. Illustrative only.

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How the Calculator Works
Methodology and accuracy

Our calculator uses a 3-step actuarial model:

  1. Base rate lookup — we interpolate mortality-based rates by age and gender from standardized actuarial tables ($ per $1,000 of sum assured per year)
  2. Lifestyle loading — your risk factors (smoking, BMI, occupation, etc.) add a percentage to the base rate
  3. Term adjustment — longer policy terms carry a small additional loading to account for extended exposure
Annual Premium = (Base Rate × Loading Factor × Term Factor) / 1000 × Sum Assured
⚠️This is an estimate only. Actual insurer quotes involve full medical underwriting, credit history, and proprietary pricing models that vary by company.

For standard risk profiles (non-smoker, healthy BMI, office job, no pre-existing conditions), the estimate is typically within 10–20% of real insurer quotes.

Accuracy may vary more for:

  • People with complex medical histories
  • Very high or very low coverage amounts
  • Ages above 55 (higher mortality variance)
  • High-risk occupations (military, firefighting, aviation)
Use our estimate as a budgeting baseline, then get 3–4 real quotes from licensed insurers for the final decision.

In Auto mode, the calculator sets your sum assured at:

Sum Assured = MAX($500,000 ; MIN($5,000,000 ; Income × 15))

The result is rounded to the nearest $250,000 for clean figures. This follows the DIME method (Debt, Income replacement, Mortgage, Education) used by financial planners to estimate coverage needs.

In Custom mode, you set your own coverage amount anywhere from $100,000 to $10,000,000.

📊Many financial advisors recommend 10–20× your annual income depending on your debt load, number of dependents, and how many working years remain.

Absolutely none. The calculator runs 100% in your browser using JavaScript. No data is sent to any server, stored in a database, or shared with insurance companies or third parties.

When you close or refresh the page, all entries are cleared. There are no cookies, no tracking pixels, and no sign-up required.

🔐Your health and financial information stays entirely private on your device.
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Factors That Affect Your Premium
Why your rate goes up or down

Smoking is the single biggest lifestyle risk factor in life insurance underwriting. Statistically, smokers have 2–4× higher mortality rates than non-smokers for the same age. Our calculator applies an 80% loading for smokers — meaning your base premium nearly doubles.

In real insurer quotes, smoker vs. non-smoker rates can differ by 200–400% depending on age and insurer.

🚭Good news: Most insurers reclassify you as a non-smoker after 12 consecutive months without tobacco use. Quitting today could cut your future premium in half.

Our calculator applies the following BMI loadings on top of your base rate:

BMI CategoryBMI RangeLoading Applied
Underweight< 18.5+10%
Normal (Best)18.5–24.90% — standard rate
Overweight25–29.9+25%
Obese≥ 30+50%

Both underweight and obese individuals have statistically higher mortality from cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other conditions.

Risk LevelLoadingExamples
Low0%Office work, tech, education, retail, management
Medium+15%Driving, light manufacturing, nursing, delivery
High+35%Mining, construction, fishing, military, firefighting, aviation crew
⚠️Real insurers may decline coverage for some extreme occupations (active combat, stunt work, deep-sea diving) or charge significantly higher loadings.

In our calculator, not exercising adds a 10% loading (conversely, regular exercise keeps you at the standard rate). In real-world underwriting, exercise habits are part of the overall health picture but are rarely directly priced — instead they show up in better blood pressure, cholesterol, and BMI results.

The bigger message: regular exercise (3+ sessions/week, 30+ min) correlates with:

  • Lower cardiovascular disease risk
  • Healthier BMI range
  • Reduced diabetes risk
  • Better blood panel results at medical exams

All of these directly improve the rate a real insurer would offer.

Our calculator applies a 40% loading for any pre-existing illness as a simplified model. Real insurers analyze individual conditions in detail:

ConditionTypical Impact
Type 2 Diabetes (controlled)+25–75% loading
Hypertension (controlled)+15–40% loading
Heart Disease (history)+100–300% or declined
Cancer (in remission, 5+ yrs)+50–200% or declined
Sleep Apnea (treated)+10–30% loading
Mild AsthmaOften standard rate
⚠️Always disclose all conditions honestly. Non-disclosure can void your policy — leaving your beneficiaries without the payout.
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Coverage & Policy Questions
Choosing the right plan

Use the DIME method to calculate your personal coverage need:

LetterComponentExample
DDebt (all outstanding)$25,000
IIncome × remaining work years$60K × 20 = $1.2M
MMortgage balance$280,000
EEducation costs per child$100,000
Total Suggested Coverage~$1.6M
💡A simple shortcut: 10–15× your annual income is a widely used quick estimate if you don’t want to itemize everything.

Choose a term that covers your peak financial vulnerability window — the years when dependents rely on your income the most. Common strategies:

  • Until your mortgage is paid off — most common (20–30 years)
  • Until your youngest child is financially independent — typically 20–25 years
  • Until traditional retirement age — age 65 minus your current age
📌If you’re 30 and plan to retire at 65, a 30–35 year term gives you full coverage through your earning years. Shorter terms cost less but leave gaps.

Standard term insurance has a fixed premium for the entire term. However, many policies offer optional add-ons (riders):

  • Convertibility rider — allows converting to permanent insurance without a new medical exam
  • Renewability option — lets you renew at term end without re-qualifying (at higher rates)
  • Coverage increase rider — allows increasing coverage on life events (marriage, new child) without re-underwriting
  • Return of premium (ROP) — refunds all premiums paid if you outlive the term (significantly more expensive)

Ready to Calculate Your Premium?

Use our free iOS-style calculator to get an instant estimate based on your age, income, and lifestyle — no email required.

Try the Calculator →
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Saving on Your Premium
Legitimate ways to pay less
  1. Buy as early as possible — every year you wait costs you more, and rates are locked in for the term
  2. Quit smoking — non-smoker rates can be 40–60% cheaper
  3. Improve your BMI — getting to a healthy weight range before applying
  4. Pay annually — monthly payments often carry a 5–8% surcharge
  5. Compare 3+ insurers — rates for identical profiles can vary by 30–50% across companies
  6. Only buy what you need — don’t over-insure; use the DIME method to right-size coverage
  7. Choose a shorter term if appropriate — a 20-year term is cheaper than a 30-year term
  8. Apply before a birthday — some insurers use your “insurance age” (nearest birthday)

In the United States, term life insurance premiums paid personally are generally not tax-deductible for individuals. However:

  • Death benefit is income-tax-free for your beneficiaries (IRC §101(a))
  • Business-owned policies may have different deductibility rules
  • Employer-paid group term up to $50,000 of coverage is excludable from employee income
  • Self-employed / business owners may deduct premiums if the policy is for key-person coverage
⚠️Tax laws vary and change. Always consult a certified tax advisor or CPA for guidance specific to your situation.
Policy TypeExam Required?Coverage LimitCost
Traditional termYes (blood, urine, vitals)Up to $5M+Lowest
Accelerated underwritingNo exam (data-based)Up to $3MSimilar
Simplified issueNo (health questions only)Up to $500KModerate
Guaranteed issueNo questions at allUp to $25KHighest
💡If you’re young and healthy, take the medical exam. Your good health results in lower premiums that outweigh the 30-minute inconvenience.
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Insurance Glossary
Key terms explained simply
Sum Assured / Death Benefit
The fixed amount paid to your beneficiaries when you die during the policy term.
Premium
The regular payment (monthly or annual) you make to keep the policy active.
Policy Term
The duration of coverage — typically 10, 20, 25, or 30 years. Coverage ends when the term expires.
Underwriting
The insurer’s process of evaluating your risk profile (health, age, lifestyle) to set your premium.
Loading Factor
A percentage added to the base premium rate because of elevated risk factors (smoking, BMI, etc.).
Beneficiary
The person (or entity) who receives the death benefit. You can name multiple with split percentages.
Rider
An optional add-on that extends or modifies your policy (e.g., accidental death, critical illness, waiver of premium).
Grace Period
A window (usually 30 days) after a missed payment where coverage remains active before the policy lapses.
Lapse
When a policy terminates due to non-payment. A lapsed policy provides no coverage.
Actuarial Tables
Statistical data on life expectancy by age, gender, and health that insurers use to price policies.
Free Look Period
10–30 days after purchasing where you can cancel for a full refund with no questions asked.
Claim Settlement Ratio
The % of claims an insurer paid out vs. received. Aim for insurers with a ratio ≥ 97%.

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