Your company's life insurance plan may not be enough. Here's why.
- - Your company's life insurance plan may not be enough. Here's why.
Daniel de Visé, USA TODAYFebruary 15, 2026 at 11:04 AM
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Roughly half of Americans have life insurance, industry estimates suggest. Fewer people own policies that will last beyond their current jobs.
Is that a bad thing?
Maybe so.
The insurance industry, of course, would like to see more Americans buy life insurance. But many financial advisers also recommend life insurance for their clients, for a host of reasons.
Many families donât purchase as much life insurance as they need, industry experts say, simply because they donât fully understand how it works.
âFor the most part, we see people who are underinsured,â said Justin Dempsey, senior manager for direct-to-consumer business at The Banner Life family of companies.
Fewer than 3 in 10 Americans consider themselves knowledgeable about life insurance, according to the 2025 Insurance Barometer Study, conducted by LIMRA and Life Happens.
Roughly half of Americans have life insurance, according to industry estimates.Who really needs life insurance?
And so, in the spirit of simplicity, weâll keep this discussion simple. Here are a few examples of people who might consider buying life insurance -- or more of it.
Young workers who are starting families
Roughly 55% of working adults have life insurance through their jobs, according to the Insurance Barometer Study.
Thatâs great, insurance experts say, but it might not be enough.
When you sign up for life insurance through an employer, youâre generally buying a basic level of coverage: The payout might be one or two years of your salary.
âGroupâ life insurance is cheap and convenient. But the payout isnât very high, and the coverage typically ends if you leave the job.
âIf they give you two yearsâ worth of your salary, then youâre basically giving your dependents two yearsâ worth of your lifestyle after you die,â said Keith Singer, a certified financial planner in Boca Raton, Florida. âAnd unless your dependents are going to become independent within two years, itâs never enough.â
Singer and other experts say group life insurance lulls workers into a false sense of security: They think theyâre covered.
Singer recommends young workers purchase more coverage. You can supplement your employerâs insurance with an individual term life policy.
âTermâ life provides coverage for a set term: Say, 20 or 30 years. If you die in that span, your survivors get a payout.
A typical $1 million, 30-year term life insurance premium for a healthy worker at age 30 âis not even $600 a year,â said Catherine Valega, a certified financial planner in Winchester, Massachusetts.
For working Americans in that age group, âeverybody should have private term life insurance,â she said. âYouâre young. Youâre healthy. Itâs cheap.â
Fewer than 3 in 10 Americans consider themselves knowledgeable about life insurance, according to an industry study.Older Americans who want to cover long-term care
Many Americans are woefully unprepared for the costs of long-term care, retirement experts say.
More than 80% of Americans will eventually need help with everyday activities, such as eating or dressing, according to a 2025 study by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.
The costs of long-term care can be staggering. The average assisted living facility charged $5,900 a month in 2024, according to a report from CareScout.
âThat, in my opinion, might be the biggest unmet need in the insurance market,â said Holly Snyder, president of Nationwide Life Insurance.
Long-term care insurance is an option. But it can get costly, especially if you wait too long to buy it.
Another option is to purchase a life insurance policy with a long-term care rider, which permits you to use some or all of the death benefit to cover long-term care.
âYou have access to that money while youâre still living,â Snyder said.
One big advantage: Your beneficiaries still reap the full death benefit in your policy if you donât tap it for long-term care.
âThe nice thing about these hybrid products is, someone gets the money back one way or another,â Valega said.
High-wealth households looking for more ways to save
One common misconception about life insurance, industry experts say, is that its only purpose is to pay a death benefit.
Above, we talked about term life insurance. The industry also offers permanent life insurance, coverage that lasts to the end of your life.
There are many varieties of permanent life policies that can build up cash value over time.
A âwholeâ life policy generally has fixed payments and a set rate of return and death benefit. âUniversalâ life has adjustable premiums and benefits. âVariableâ life offers performance tied to stock and bond markets or other investments.
Once youâve built enough cash value, you are often able to withdraw from or borrow against your policy.
âIt does act as a flexible financial tool to build cash,â said Nick Lamanna, wealth management advisor at Northwestern Mutual. âIt could fund retirement. It could fund higher education.â
Life insurance policies offer many tax advantages. The death benefit is usually tax-free to whomever claims it. Your premiums are generally made after tax, and money you withdraw or borrow is generally not taxed again until you tap out the principal.
âWhat people donât understand is that when you have cash value in your policy, you can take a loan against that cash value, and then that money comes back to you tax-free,â Snyder said.
Who really doesnât need life insurance?
Now, to play devilâs advocate, letâs look at a few scenarios where you might not need life insurance.
Retirees: If youâre no longer working, there may no longer be an income that would need to be replaced upon your death.
âYou donât need insurance if thereâs no economic loss if you die,â Singer said.
People with no dependents: You probably donât need life insurance if âyou donât have anyone who is relying on you for your income,â said Erika Safran, a certified financial planner in New York.
Older Americans. The older you get, the more expensive life insurance becomes. Past a certain age, a new policy might not be worth the cost.
âMy question, at age 66, is, why would you be buying life insurance?â Safran said. âIt would cost them an arm and a leg.â
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Should you get life insurance outside of your job? What to know.
Source: âAOL Moneyâ