Term Life Insurance — How Much Cover Do You Actually Need? (₹1 Cr / ₹2 Cr / ₹5 Cr Decoded)
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Term Life Insurance — How Much Cover Do You Actually Need? (₹1 Cr / ₹2 Cr / ₹5 Cr Decoded)

Term Life Insurance — How Much Cover Do You Actually Need?

Last verified: April 2026, against IRDAI’s 2024 product norms, current insurer rate cards (HDFC Life Click 2 Protect, Max Life Smart Secure Plus, ICICI Pru iProtect Smart, Tata AIA Sampoorna Raksha), and Section 80C provisions.

The “buy 10× your annual income” rule is a starting point, not an answer. A 32-year-old earning ₹15 lakh with a non-working spouse, two kids, a ₹50 lakh home loan, and ₹20 lakh in liabilities needs a different cover than a single 28-year-old earning ₹15 lakh with no dependants. This guide gives you a 4-component framework — income replacement, outstanding liabilities, education for dependants, and inflation buffer — and walks through ₹1 Cr / ₹2 Cr / ₹5 Cr cases so you can land on the right number.

The 4-component cover formula

Total term cover = Income replacement + Outstanding loans + Future education/marriage + Inflation buffer for spouse

Component How to size
Income replacement Annual income × number of years dependants need support (typically 15-20 years)
Outstanding loans Sum of home loan, car loan, education loan, personal loan (current outstanding)
Future kid expenses Estimated cost of education + marriage in today’s rupees, multiplied by inflation factor
Inflation buffer 20-25% on top of the above to account for cost-of-living rise

Worked example — 32-year-old earning ₹15 L

  • Income replacement: ₹15 L × 17 years (till retirement) = ₹2.55 Cr
  • Home loan outstanding: ₹50 L
  • Car + personal loans: ₹8 L
  • 2 kids’ education + marriage (today’s value): ₹50 L
  • Inflation buffer (~20%): ₹70 L
  • Subtotal: ~₹4.30 Cr
  • Less existing liquid assets / EPF / corpus: ₹30 L

Recommended cover: ₹4 Cr. Pick the closest standard sum-assured tier (most insurers offer ₹1 Cr / ₹2 Cr / ₹3 Cr / ₹5 Cr) — usually ₹4 Cr is available too, but if not, round up to ₹5 Cr (premium difference is small).

Premium pricing — what ₹1-5 Cr actually costs

Indicative annual premium for a 32-year-old non-smoker male, healthy, level term till age 65 (20-year tenure plus return-of-premium-not-attached pure protection):

Sum assured HDFC Life Click 2 Protect Max Life Smart Secure Plus ICICI Pru iProtect Smart Tata AIA Sampoorna Raksha
₹1 Cr ~₹11,000 ~₹10,500 ~₹10,800 ~₹10,200
₹2 Cr ~₹19,500 ~₹18,500 ~₹19,000 ~₹18,200
₹3 Cr ~₹26,500 ~₹25,500 ~₹26,000 ~₹25,000
₹5 Cr ~₹40,000 ~₹38,500 ~₹39,500 ~₹37,500

Premiums for women are typically 10-15% lower for equivalent cover. Smokers/users of tobacco pay ~30-50% more. Health-condition pricing varies — declared diabetes/hypertension typically adds 30-100% loading depending on severity.

Five mistakes that cost real money

  1. Buying ROP (Return of Premium) variants. “Get all premiums back if you survive” sounds great. The math: ROP variants cost 3-4× pure-protection premium. The “extra premium” invested in equity over 30 years compounds to far more than the refund. Buy pure term, invest the difference.
  2. Mixing investment and protection. ULIPs, money-back policies, endowment plans — all combine insurance + investment, and do both poorly. See our 80C ranking for why endowment is rank #8 of 8.
  3. Buying short-tenure cover. 10-15 year cover ending at age 45-50 leaves you uninsured during peak liability years. Buy till age 65-70.
  4. Hiding pre-existing conditions. Insurers cross-check medical records via IRDAI’s Insurance Information Bureau. Concealment is a common claim-rejection ground. Declare honestly; the higher premium is far better than a rejected claim.
  5. One spouse insured, the other uninsured. Both earning spouses need cover. Even a homemaker spouse should have ₹50 L-1 Cr cover — replacing the household-management contribution costs real money.

Tax angle

Premium under Section 80C up to ₹1.5 L (old regime) — but term insurance premium is typically ₹10K-40K, so this isn’t the primary value. Death proceeds are tax-free under Section 10(10D) regardless of regime, provided premium doesn’t exceed 10% of sum assured (which it never does for term plans).

The tax regime decision doesn’t change term insurance pricing — buy what you need; the tax saving is incidental.

Choosing the insurer — what actually matters

Metric What to check Where to find it
Claim Settlement Ratio (CSR) 97%+ on individual claims IRDAI Annual Report
Solvency Ratio Above 1.5× (regulatory minimum) Insurer’s annual report
Claim Settlement Time 30 days or faster (median) IRDAI complaint data
Financial strength rating AA or AAA from CRISIL/CARE Insurer’s credit rating page

Top private insurers (HDFC Life, Max Life, ICICI Prudential, Tata AIA) all maintain CSRs above 99% on individual claims for FY 2024-25. The “go with LIC because they always pay” narrative is dated; private insurers now match or exceed LIC on CSR for term plans.

Linked deep-dives

FAQs

Should I buy term insurance from LIC or a private insurer?

Both are equally safe — IRDAI regulates all insurers and the IRDAI guarantee fund covers solvency. Private insurers (HDFC Life, Max Life) offer lower premium for similar cover, claim-settlement ratios above 99%, and online policy management. The “LIC = safer” belief is based on legacy, not current data.

Is online term insurance reliable?

Yes — online policies have lower distribution costs and 10-20% cheaper premiums. Claim experience is identical to offline; the policy contract is the same. Buy directly from the insurer’s website, not from aggregators that add a markup.

Should I disclose my smoking habit?

Yes. Insurers do nicotine tests at medical underwriting. Concealment is a common rejection ground. Declared smoking adds 30-50% premium but ensures claim safety.

Can I increase my term cover later?

Yes — buy a “second” term policy from any insurer. Some plans (Max Life Smart Secure Plus) include “increase cover at life stages” — useful for marriage/childbirth events.

What if I quit my job mid-term?

Term policies are individual, not employer-linked. Premiums must be paid by you regardless of employment. Don’t rely on employer group term cover (often ₹50 L-1 Cr only) — buy your own.

Is there term insurance for housewives?

Yes — most insurers offer term cover for homemakers up to ₹1 Cr. Eligibility is tied to husband’s income and existing cover. Premium is similar to working women of same age.

Sources & references

Last verified: April 2026. Premiums change based on insurer underwriting; check current rates on the insurer site.

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