The most fundamental choice in life insurance is between term and permanent coverage. Each serves a different purpose, and understanding the differences helps you make the right choice for your family.

Term Life Insurance

Term life insurance provides coverage for a specific period — typically 10, 15, 20, 25, or 30 years. If you die during the term, your beneficiaries receive the death benefit. If you outlive the term, the coverage ends. It's pure insurance with no savings or investment component, which makes it the most affordable type of life insurance available.

A healthy 30-year-old can get a $500,000 20-year term policy for $20 to $30 per month. That's the cost of a few coffees per week to protect your family with half a million dollars of coverage. Term insurance is designed to cover temporary needs — like raising children, paying off a mortgage, or replacing income during your working years.

Permanent Life Insurance

Permanent life insurance (which includes whole life, universal life, and variable life) provides coverage that lasts your entire lifetime as long as premiums are paid. In addition to the death benefit, permanent policies build cash value — a savings component that grows over time and can be accessed during your lifetime.

The trade-off is cost. Permanent life insurance premiums are significantly higher than term premiums — often 5 to 15 times more for the same death benefit. That higher premium is partly paying for the lifelong coverage guarantee and partly funding the cash value accumulation.

Key Differences

Duration: Term covers a specific period, permanent covers your whole life. Cost: Term is significantly cheaper for the same death benefit. Cash value: Only permanent policies build cash value. Flexibility: Term is straightforward, permanent offers more options but more complexity. Purpose: Term is best for temporary needs, permanent is best for lifelong needs and estate planning.

Which Should You Choose?

For most families, term life insurance is the right starting point. It provides the most coverage for the lowest cost during the years when your family's financial vulnerability is greatest — while you're raising children, paying a mortgage, and building savings. The money you save on premiums compared to permanent insurance can be invested in retirement accounts where it may grow even faster than a policy's cash value.

Permanent insurance makes sense when you need coverage that never expires (for estate planning or leaving a legacy), when you want to build cash value as a supplemental savings vehicle, when you've already maxed out other tax-advantaged accounts, or when you have a special needs dependent who will need support for life.

The Blended Approach

Many people benefit from a combination of both. A large term policy covers your income replacement needs during working years, while a smaller permanent policy provides lifelong coverage and cash value accumulation. This blended approach gives you maximum coverage when you need it most and permanent protection as you age.

There's no wrong answer between term and permanent — only the wrong amount of coverage. The best policy is the one that fits your budget and your family's needs. An independent agent can help you find the right balance of both.

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