Life Insurance at 70
How much coverage you likely need at 70, a suggested term length, and a rough cost estimate — no signup, no quote spam.
Coverage guidance (~10× income)
$150,000
on ~$50,000 income
Suggested term
10-year
Est. premium
$950/mo
healthy non-smoker, ~$500k 20-yr term
Estimate your coverage at 70
Life insurance you should carry (DIME method)
$905,000
DIME = Debt + Income (× years to replace) + Mortgage + Education + final Expenses.
Life insurance at 70: what to know
By 70 many buyers turn to small final-expense or guaranteed-issue policies, since standard 20-year term is rarely offered and is very expensive.
The 10× income rule is only a starting point. The DIME method — Debt, Income (replaced for a set number of years), Mortgage, and Education — usually gives a more accurate number, especially if you have a mortgage or children. The calculator above uses it; adjust the inputs to match your situation.
Life insurance at 70 FAQ
How much life insurance do I need at 70?
A common rule of thumb is about 10× your income, which for a 70-year-old earning roughly $50,000 works out to around $150,000. By 70 many buyers turn to small final-expense or guaranteed-issue policies, since standard 20-year term is rarely offered and is very expensive. The right number depends on your debts, mortgage, dependents, and existing savings — use the calculator above to size it to your actual obligations.
How much does life insurance cost at 70?
A healthy non-smoker buying roughly $500k of 20-year level term at 70 can expect somewhere around $950 per month as a ballpark. Your real rate depends on health, gender, coverage amount, term length, and carrier — always compare quotes from at least three insurers.
What term length should I choose at 70?
At 70, a 10-year level term is a common choice because it tends to cover the years you still have dependents at home and debts to pay off. Pick the term that lasts until your biggest obligations (mortgage, kids through college) are behind you.