Why this question matters
Too little life insurance and your family can't maintain their standard of living if you die. Too much and you're paying more than you need to for decades. Getting it right requires thinking through your financial situation carefully — here's how.
The DIME method
A widely used framework for calculating life insurance needs:
- D — Debt: All outstanding debts that would need clearing — mortgage, car finance, personal loans, credit cards
- I — Income: The number of years your family would need income replacement, multiplied by your annual income. Typically until your youngest child is financially independent.
- M — Mortgage: Outstanding mortgage balance (if not already covered above)
- E — Education: Estimated private school fees or university costs if you want to fund these for your children
Add these together for a rough total. This can be refined based on your specific circumstances.
The 10× rule
A simpler starting point: cover 10× your annual gross income. This is a rough guide, not a precise calculation — but it gives a useful ballpark that most financial planning frameworks support for families with dependants and a mortgage.
Factors that reduce the amount you need
- Death in service benefit: Many employers pay 3–4× salary on death. Subtract this from your requirement.
- Savings and investments: Accessible funds your family could use
- Partner's income: If your partner earns well and could maintain the household independently
- State benefits: Bereavement Support Payment and Child Benefit would provide some income
- Mortgage insurance: If you already have a decreasing term policy on your mortgage
Factors that increase the amount you need
- Young children — more years of financial dependency ahead
- A non-earning or lower-earning partner
- Private school or university costs you want to fund
- Business debts or director's guarantees
- Inheritance tax planning (a whole of life policy in trust)
💡 Don't forget to insure a non-working or lower-earning partner. The cost of replacing childcare, household management, and the emotional support they provide has real financial value — and is often overlooked.
Review regularly
Your life insurance needs change over time. Major life events that should trigger a review:
- Having a child
- Moving home / increasing your mortgage
- Significant salary increase
- Marriage or divorce
- A partner changing their employment
- Children becoming financially independent
A protection adviser can review your existing cover and confirm whether it's still appropriate — or identify gaps — at any life stage.