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Policy Management

When Should You Increase Your Life Insurance Coverage?

Key life events that signal it's time to increase your life insurance coverage. From marriage to buying a home, know when to reassess your policy.

By Ali Taqi · · 2 min read

Life insurance isn't something you set up once and forget about. As your life changes, your coverage needs change too. Here are the key moments when you should reassess your policy and consider increasing your coverage.

Getting Married

Marriage often means combining finances, sharing a mortgage, and depending on each other's income. If your spouse would struggle financially without your income, it's time to make sure your life insurance reflects that new reality. Even if both spouses work, losing one income can make it impossible to maintain your lifestyle.

Having or Adopting Children

Children are the single biggest reason people buy more life insurance. Each child represents years of financial responsibility — from childcare and daily expenses to college tuition. A common guideline is to add $250,000 to $500,000 in coverage per child, depending on your goals for their education and upbringing.

Buying a Home

A mortgage is likely the largest debt you'll ever take on. If you pass away, your family shouldn't have to sell the home because they can't make the payments. Make sure your coverage amount includes enough to pay off your mortgage balance or cover payments for the remaining term.

Getting a Raise or Promotion

Higher income means a higher standard of living — and a bigger gap if that income disappears. If your family has adjusted to a $120,000 household income, a policy based on a $80,000 salary won't maintain their lifestyle. Review your coverage whenever your income increases significantly.

Starting a Business

Business owners face unique risks. Your death could mean the end of the business, loss of key relationships, and financial hardship for employees and partners. Key person insurance, buy-sell agreement funding, and increased personal coverage all become important when you're a business owner.

Taking on Debt

Student loans (especially with cosigners), car loans, home equity lines, and business debt all represent financial obligations that someone may have to cover if you pass away. Each new debt is a reason to review whether your current coverage is sufficient.

How to Reassess

The simplest approach is the income replacement method: multiply your annual income by 10 to 15, add any outstanding debts, add future education costs for children, and subtract existing savings and investments. The result is your target coverage amount. If your current policy falls short, it may be time to add a supplemental policy or replace your existing one.

Life changes fast. Your life insurance should keep up. A quick annual review — or a review after any major life event — ensures your family is always properly protected.

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