- 1. Why "15x income" is a flawed thumb rule
- 2. The Human Life Value (HLV) method explained
- 3. Why current liquid assets reduce required cover
- 4. Adjusting for dependants properly
- 5. Tenure and laddering strategies
- 6. Term vs ULIP vs traditional plans
- 7. NRI and HNI considerations
- 8. Working through a real example
1. Why "15x income" is a flawed thumb rule
You'll see this number everywhere: "Buy term insurance equal to 15-20 times your annual income." It's a marketing line that sounds intuitive but is wrong for most people in two opposite directions.
For some, 15x income is significantly under-cover. A 32-year-old with a young family, ₹50L home loan, and parents to support needs more than 15x cover — closer to 25-30x.
For others, 15x is significantly over-cover. A 50-year-old with grown children, paid-off house, and ₹2 crore in investments may need only 5-10x — or even less.
The right number isn't a multiple. It's a calculation that accounts for your specific situation: dependants, debts, existing savings, and how long your family needs income replacement.
2. The Human Life Value (HLV) method explained
HLV is the methodology used by professional financial planners to size insurance properly. The formula in its simplest form:
Required Life Cover = (Annual Income × Years to Replace × Dependant Multiplier) + Outstanding Liabilities − Existing Liquid Assets
Each variable matters:
- Annual Income: Take-home, after-tax annual income
- Years to Replace: How many years your family needs income support (until kids finish college, until spouse can become independently earning, etc.)
- Dependant Multiplier: Adjustment for number of dependants (more dependants = higher multiplier)
- Outstanding Liabilities: Home loan, car loan, education loan balances
- Existing Liquid Assets: Investments, savings, mutual funds your family can deploy
The result is a number specific to your situation, not a generic multiple.
3. Why current liquid assets reduce required cover
This is the variable most insurance advice ignores — and the one that makes the biggest difference for established families.
If your family already has ₹50 lakh invested in mutual funds, ₹20 lakh in PPF, and ₹15 lakh in savings — that's ₹85 lakh of liquid assets that can support the family even without your income. Your insurance need is ₹85 lakh less than someone with the same income but no savings.
This is why a 30-year-old at the start of their career needs much higher cover than a 50-year-old at the same income level — the 50-year-old has accumulated savings that partially self-insure.
Practical implication: your insurance need decreases as your wealth grows. Most people buy a term policy at age 30 and never revisit it. By age 50, they may be carrying expensive cover they no longer need.
4. Adjusting for dependants properly
Not all dependants are equal. The dependant multiplier should account for who depends on you and for how long:
| Dependant Profile | Multiplier Adjustment |
|---|---|
| Working spouse, no kids | 0.8x (lower need) |
| Non-working spouse, no kids | 1.0x (baseline) |
| Spouse + 1 young child | 1.15x |
| Spouse + 2 young children | 1.25-1.30x |
| Spouse + 3 children | 1.40-1.50x |
| Plus dependent parents | +0.10x per dependent parent |
This isn't an exact science — every family's situation is different. The point is that the multiplier should reflect your specific obligations, not a one-size-fits-all assumption.
Years-to-replace should also vary: if you have a 5-year-old child, you need cover until they're financially independent (~22 years from now). If your kids are already in college, cover is needed for 3-5 years. The formula adjusts naturally.
5. Tenure and laddering strategies
Most people buy a single 30-year term policy. There's a better approach: laddering.
Single tenure approach:
- One ₹2 crore policy for 30 years at age 30
- Premium: roughly ₹25,000/year
- Total premium over 30 years: ₹7.5 lakh
Laddered approach:
- ₹1 crore for 30 years (lifetime cover) — premium ~₹15,000/year
- ₹1 crore for 15 years (kids in school years) — premium ~₹8,000/year
- Total premium years 1-15: ₹23,000/year
- Total premium years 16-30: ₹15,000/year
- Total over 30 years: ₹5.7 lakh
You save ~₹1.8 lakh in premiums while having higher cover during the years you need it most (when kids are young and dependent). This works because mortality risk is lower in your 30s and rises with age, while your need for cover often peaks in 30s-40s.
6. Term vs ULIP vs traditional plans
This is the area where 80% of Indian families get it wrong, often because of mis-selling. The honest comparison:
| Product | Cover for ₹X premium | Returns | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Term | 10-20x more cover | None (pure insurance) | ✓ Right for 95% of people |
| ULIP | Modest cover | Equity returns minus 2-4% fees | Almost never optimal |
| Endowment | Low cover | 4-6% IRR | Almost never optimal |
| Money-back | Very low cover | 3-5% IRR | Almost never optimal |
| Whole Life | Lifetime cover | 4-5% IRR | Specific estate planning use only |
The cardinal rule of insurance: buy insurance for protection, not for investment. Pure term insurance gives you maximum cover per rupee of premium. Then invest the savings (versus what you'd pay for a ULIP) directly in mutual funds. Over 20+ years, this approach delivers more wealth and more protection than the bundled products.
The exception: very specific use cases like estate planning for HNIs may warrant whole-life policies. For 95% of Indian families, pure term + separate equity SIPs is the right answer.
7. NRI and HNI considerations
NRIs face additional complications:
- NRI-eligible insurers: Not all Indian life insurers accept NRI applicants; HDFC Life, ICICI Prudential, Max Life, Bajaj Allianz typically do.
- Medical underwriting from abroad: Some insurers require medical exams in India; others accept tele-medicals or foreign-country reports.
- Premium payment: From NRE/NRO account, in INR.
- Cover continuation if you return: Most policies continue seamlessly when you become resident.
HNI specifics:
- Insurers cap individual cover at ₹2-5 crore typically; for cover above this, multiple policies across insurers
- HNI medical underwriting is more rigorous; expect doctor visit + lab tests for ₹2 crore+ cover
- Income proof required: ₹2 crore cover typically requires ₹15-20 lakh annual income evidence
- Riders matter more for HNIs: critical illness, accidental disability, waiver of premium
8. Working through a real example
Let's calculate cover for a representative profile:
Profile: Bangalore-based software engineering manager, age 35, married with 2 children (ages 6 and 3). Annual income ₹40 lakh take-home. Outstanding home loan ₹70 lakh. Current investments + savings ₹35 lakh. Spouse is a homemaker.
HLV calculation:
- Annual Income: ₹40 lakh
- Years to Replace: 18 years (until both kids are 21+)
- Dependant Multiplier: 1.25 (spouse + 2 kids)
- Income Replacement: 40 × 18 × 1.25 = ₹900 lakh = ₹9 crore
- Add Outstanding Loans: + ₹70 lakh
- Less Liquid Assets: − ₹35 lakh
- Required Cover: ₹9.35 crore
Compare to the ₹6 crore (15x income) thumb rule. The HLV calculation reveals significant under-cover.
Practical implementation: ₹5 crore policy from one insurer (HDFC Life Click 2 Protect) + ₹4.5 crore from a second insurer (ICICI Prudential or Max Life). Combined annual premium roughly ₹50,000-60,000. Far less than the ULIP this engineer was likely sold.
Sizing your insurance correctly
- "15x income" is a flawed shortcut — it under-insures young families and over-insures established ones.
- HLV method: (Income × Years × Dependant Multiplier) + Loans − Liquid Assets.
- Liquid assets reduce your insurance need — your cover should decrease as wealth grows.
- Pure term beats ULIP almost always — buy protection separately from investments.
- Laddering tenures saves 20-30% on premiums while maintaining peak-year cover.