The 10x Rule — A Good Starting Point
The most commonly cited guideline is to carry 10–12 times your annual income in life insurance coverage. If you earn $80,000 a year, that suggests a policy between $800,000 and $960,000.
This rule exists because it gives your family enough to replace your income for roughly a decade — time to adjust, pay off debts, and stabilize financially without your contribution.
But for California residents, the 10x rule is often just a floor — not a ceiling.
California context: With some of the highest home prices and cost of living in the nation, California families often need more coverage than the national rule of thumb suggests. A $600,000 mortgage alone can eat up most of a standard policy.
A Better Way to Calculate Your Number
Instead of just multiplying your income, add up what your family would actually need. Here's a simple framework:
1. Income Replacement
How many years would your family need your income replaced? Multiply your annual income by the number of years until your youngest child is financially independent or you planned to retire.
2. Mortgage Balance
Add your current outstanding mortgage balance. This ensures your family can keep their home without your income.
3. Other Debts
Include car loans, credit card balances, student loans, or any debt that would fall on your family.
4. Future Expenses
Consider college tuition for your children, childcare costs, or any major upcoming expenses your family is counting on.
5. Subtract Existing Assets
Subtract savings, investments, retirement accounts, and any existing life insurance your employer provides.
| Factor | Example Amount |
|---|---|
| Income replacement (20 years x $75,000) | $1,500,000 |
| Mortgage balance | $450,000 |
| Other debts | $25,000 |
| Children's education | $100,000 |
| Total need | $2,075,000 |
| Minus: existing savings & employer coverage | -$150,000 |
| Recommended coverage | $1,925,000 |
How Long Should the Term Be?
The term length should cover the period when your family is most financially vulnerable. Ask yourself — when will my family no longer need my income?
- 20-year term — most popular choice for young families. Covers the years when children are growing up and mortgages are largest.
- 30-year term — best if you have young children and a large mortgage. Provides the longest window of protection.
- 15-year term — good if your mortgage is nearly paid off or your children are older.
- 10-year term — suitable if you're close to retirement and mostly need a bridge policy.
Does Age Affect How Much You Need?
Your age affects your premium more than your coverage amount. But it does influence the strategy:
- In your 20s–30s: Buy as much coverage as you comfortably can. Premiums are lowest and your financial obligations are often highest relative to your savings.
- In your 40s: Focus on covering the remaining mortgage, income replacement through retirement, and any dependent children.
- In your 50s: Consider a shorter term focused on specific obligations like a mortgage payoff date or a spouse's retirement.
The most important thing: Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. A policy that covers your mortgage and provides some income replacement is far better than no policy at all. Start with what you can afford and adjust over time.
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Every California family's situation is different. As a licensed California life insurance agent, I can help you figure out the right coverage amount for your specific income, debts, family size, and budget — at no charge and with zero obligation.
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