Your company’s life insurance plan may not be enough. Here’s why.

Your company’s life insurance plan may not be enough. Here’s why.

Your company’s life insurance plan may not be enough. Here’s why.

Roughly half of Americans have life insurance, industry estimates suggest. Fewer people own policies that will last beyond their current jobs.

Is that a bad thing?

Maybe so.

The insurance industry, of course, would like to see more Americans buy life insurance. But many financial advisers also recommend life insurance for their clients, for a host of reasons.

Many families don’t purchase as much life insurance as they need, industry experts say, simply because they don’t fully understand how it works.

“For the most part, we see people who are underinsured,” said Justin Dempsey, senior manager for direct-to-consumer business at The Banner Life family of companies.

Fewer than 3 in 10 Americans consider themselves knowledgeable about life insurance, according to the 2025 Insurance Barometer Study, conducted by LIMRA and Life Happens.

Roughly half of Americans have life insurance, according to industry estimates.
Roughly half of Americans have life insurance, according to industry estimates.

And so, in the spirit of simplicity, we’ll keep this discussion simple. Here are a few examples of people who might consider buying life insurance — or more of it.

Roughly 55% of working adults have life insurance through their jobs, according to the Insurance Barometer Study.

That’s great, insurance experts say, but it might not be enough.

When you sign up for life insurance through an employer, you’re generally buying a basic level of coverage: The payout might be one or two years of your salary.

“Group” life insurance is cheap and convenient. But the payout isn’t very high, and the coverage typically ends if you leave the job.

“If they give you two years’ worth of your salary, then you’re basically giving your dependents two years’ worth of your lifestyle after you die,” said Keith Singer, a certified financial planner in Boca Raton, Florida. “And unless your dependents are going to become independent within two years, it’s never enough.”

Singer and other experts say group life insurance lulls workers into a false sense of security: They think they’re covered.

Singer recommends young workers purchase more coverage. You can supplement your employer’s insurance with an individual term life policy.

“Term” life provides coverage for a set term: Say, 20 or 30 years. If you die in that span, your survivors get a payout.

A typical $1 million, 30-year term life insurance premium for a healthy worker at age 30 “is not even $600 a year,” said Catherine Valega, a certified financial planner in Winchester, Massachusetts.