How Much Life Insurance Do You Actually Need

The 10x income rule is just a starting point. The DIME method gives you a more accurate number. Here is how to calculate the right coverage for your situation.

One of the most common questions we get after 36 years in this business: “How much coverage do I actually need?” The honest answer is that the generic rules of thumb are a starting point, not a final answer. Here is a practical way to arrive at a number that fits your actual life.

The 10-15x Income Rule: A Starting Point, Not a Ceiling

You have probably heard the advice to buy 10 to 15 times your annual income in life insurance. For someone earning $80,000 per year, that means $800,000 to $1,200,000 in coverage.

This rule exists because it is easy to remember and gets most people in the right ballpark. But it does not account for debt, mortgage balance, number of dependents, existing savings, or whether your employer provides any coverage. Two people earning the same salary can have very different coverage needs.

The DIME Method: A Better Framework

DIME stands for Debt, Income replacement, Mortgage, and Education. Working through each category gives you a more complete picture.

Debt. Add up all outstanding debts except your mortgage: credit cards, car loans, student loans, personal loans. This is the amount your beneficiaries would need to cover those obligations.

Income replacement. Multiply your annual income by the number of years your dependents will need support. For a 35-year-old with young children, that might be 20 to 25 years. For someone whose youngest child is 16, the window is shorter.

Mortgage. Include the full remaining balance on your home. Your family should not have to sell the house because they cannot cover the mortgage.

Education. Estimate future education costs for each child. Current figures put four-year in-state public university costs at roughly $100,000 to $130,000. Private universities run two to three times that.

Example: A 35-Year-Old with $80K Salary

Here is how this plays out with real numbers.

CategoryAmount
Debt (car loan + credit cards)$28,000
Income replacement (20 years x $80,000)$1,600,000
Mortgage balance$250,000
Education (2 children x $110,000)$220,000
Total gross need$2,098,000

Subtract existing assets: $50,000 in savings, $200,000 in a 401(k), $100,000 in employer-provided life insurance. Net coverage need: approximately $1,748,000.

That is a long way from the “10x income = $800,000” estimate.

Do Not Let the Premium Scare You Into Underinsuring

The difference between a $500,000 policy and a $1,000,000 policy for a healthy 35-year-old is often less than $20 per month. People regularly discover that doubling their coverage adds almost nothing to their monthly cost. The mistake of buying too little coverage to save $15 a month is one of the more painful ones we have seen families navigate.

What to Subtract

Before finalizing a number, subtract:

  • Existing life insurance through your employer (check whether it is portable)
  • Any personally owned policies already in force
  • Liquid savings your family could draw on
  • A spouse’s income, if applicable and sustainable

The Right Number Is Yours, Not Generic

Every family’s situation is different. A stay-at-home parent with three children and a $350,000 mortgage has a different calculation than a dual-income household with no children. Our agents can help you work through the DIME method with your actual numbers and find the right coverage at the best available rate.

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