Coverage comparison

Term Life vs. Whole Life Insurance

These are the two most common life insurance products on the market. Term is what most working families need; whole life solves a narrower set of problems for a higher monthly cost. Here's the honest breakdown.

Option A Term life

Pure protection, level for the term

vs
Option B Whole life

Permanent coverage with cash value

Side by side

Point-by-point comparison.

Comparison Term life Whole life
Monthly premium (healthy 35-yo, $500K) $24–$32/mo $400–$600/mo
Coverage duration 10/15/20/25/30 years Lifetime (as long as premiums paid)
Death benefit guaranteed? Yes, if death within term Yes, lifetime
Cash value buildup None Yes, tax-deferred
Premium changes over time Locked for the full term Locked for life
Convertible to permanent Yes, conversion option Already permanent
Best for income replacement Yes — primary use case Possible but expensive
Best for estate planning / legacy Limited (term ends) Yes — primary use case
Cost per $1K of coverage Lowest available Highest among common products
Term life wins when
  • You need 10-30 years of coverage to protect family income, mortgage, or kids' education.
  • You're in your 20s-50s in good health.
  • You want the most coverage for the lowest dollar.
  • You're building wealth in 401(k)/IRA/index funds and don't need a tax-deferred savings vehicle inside an insurance product.
Whole life wins when
  • You need lifetime coverage (special-needs dependent, estate-tax planning, charitable bequest).
  • You've maxed out other tax-deferred accounts and want another one.
  • You're using it to fund a buy-sell agreement in a closely-held business.
  • You want a forced-savings discipline you'll actually stick with.
Common questions

Term Life vs. Whole Life Insurance FAQ

Why don't most families buy whole life if it's permanent?

Cost. The same $500K of coverage typically costs 15-25× more per month as whole life vs. term. Most working families don't need lifetime coverage — they need 20-30 years to cover the income-replacement window — and the cost difference invested elsewhere produces a better outcome.

Can I buy both?

Yes, and it's a common strategy. We frequently structure clients with a large term policy ($1M+) for working-years protection plus a small whole life policy ($50K-$100K) for permanent final-expense and estate-planning use.

What about the conversion option?

Most major-carrier term policies include a conversion option that lets you convert all or part to permanent coverage from the same carrier without new medical underwriting, typically within 10 years of issue or to age 65-75. This gives you flexibility to lock in permanent coverage later if your health changes.

Ready to see real numbers from multiple carriers?

Free Will Kit + 15-min review. We quote 5–8 carriers and tell you straight which option fits.