FinspireFinspire Solutions
InsuranceJun 10, 2023 · 5 min read

Life Insurance in Your 50s: Still Necessary?

As you approach retirement, your insurance needs change. Here's how to evaluate coverage needs.

Pranav Desai, Founder and Licensed Insurance Agent at Finspire Solutions
Founder & Licensed Insurance Agent · Finspire Solutions

In your 30s, life insurance is about income replacement, protecting a young family and a mortgage. By your 50s the mortgage is smaller and the kids are grown, so people ask a fair question: do I still need it? The answer depends on what job you now need the policy to do.

Reasons coverage still matters at 50+

  • Replacing a spouse's Social Security or pension income that stops at death
  • Covering a remaining mortgage or business debt
  • Creating a tax-free legacy or equalizing an inheritance
  • Funding estate taxes so heirs are not forced to sell assets
  • Cash value and living benefits you can use while alive

Term vs. permanent

Term insurance is cheap and simple, ideal if you only need coverage for a defined period (say, until a mortgage is paid or a pension starts). Permanent insurance (including IUL) costs more but never expires, builds tax-advantaged cash value, and can double as a tax-free income and legacy tool, which is why it shows up in retirement plans, not just protection plans.

The modern angle: living benefits

Many current policies include riders that let you access the death benefit early for chronic or terminal illness, effectively a long-term-care hedge built into the policy. For a generation worried about the cost of care, that feature alone can justify keeping coverage.

The real question in your 50s is not "term or whole life?" It is "what do I want this money to do, and when?" Answer that, and the right structure becomes obvious.

Want this applied to your situation?

Book a free 30-minute call and we'll turn these ideas into a plan built around your numbers. Or explore our coverage options and free calculators.

This article is general educational information, not tax, legal, investment, or individualized insurance advice. Rules and figures change; verify current details with a qualified professional, IRS.gov, or Medicare.gov before acting.