Comparison

Term vs Whole Life Insurance: Which Do You Actually Need?

Short answer: For the vast majority of people, term life is the right choice: it's pure, cheap protection for the years your family actually depends on your income, often costing 5–15× less than whole life for the same death benefit. Whole life (a permanent policy with a cash-value investment component) only makes sense in narrow cases — estate-tax planning, a lifelong dependent, or a maxed-out high earner wanting another tax-deferred bucket. The classic strategy is 'buy term and invest the difference'.

Term Life

Pure insurance for a set period (10–30 years). Cheap, simple, and matched to the years you have dependents and a mortgage. No cash value — and that's the point.

Whole Life

Permanent coverage plus a cash-value account that grows slowly tax-deferred. Far more expensive, more complex, and only worth it for specific niche needs.

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Why term is so much cheaper

Term insurance only pays out if you die during the term, and most people outlive a 20- or 30-year term, so insurers can price it low. Whole life is built to pay out eventually plus fund a cash-value account and commissions, so premiums can be 5–15× higher for the same death benefit. For a young family, that difference is the gap between being adequately covered and being underinsured.

'Buy term and invest the difference'

The cash value inside whole life typically grows at modest rates after fees — often well below what a low-cost index fund has returned over long periods. So the common advice is: buy a large term policy for cheap, and invest the premium difference yourself in tax-advantaged accounts. Over 20–30 years, the invested difference usually beats the policy's cash value, and you keep full control and liquidity.

When whole life genuinely makes sense

Permanent insurance has real uses: covering estate taxes so heirs don't force-sell assets, providing for a dependent who will need support for life (e.g. a disabled child), business succession funding, or a high earner who has already maxed every other tax-advantaged account and wants additional tax-deferred growth. These are the exceptions — not the default a salesperson may present it as.

The Verdict

Have dependents, a mortgage, or income others rely on? Buy enough term to cover them through those years, and invest the money you save versus whole life. Consider whole life only for specific estate, special-needs, or business-succession reasons — and price a term policy alongside it first so you see exactly what the permanent features are costing you.

Methodology: FormulasData Sources: CitationsAuthor: Subhash DUpdated: June 2026

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