A good term cover is typically (all liabilities) + (10–15 years of expenses/income gap) + (big goals like children’s education) minus existing liquid assets and existing life cover. The goal is to ensure your family can repay loans and maintain lifestyle without being forced to sell assets quickly.
Back to: Term Insurance guide
Term cover calculation worksheet
| Component | Item | Calculation | Your amount (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|
| A) Liabilities | Home loan outstanding | Check loan statement | |
| Car loan | Add if any | ||
| Personal/credit card loans | Total outstanding | ||
| B) Income protection | Monthly expense | Current spending × 12 | |
| Years of cover needed | 10-15 years | ||
| Subtotal (B) | Annual expense × years | ||
| C) Goals | Education (kids) | ₹15-50L per child | |
| Marriage | ₹5-10L per dependent | ||
| Parent support | If dependent on you | ||
| D) Subtract | Liquid assets (FD, MF) | Don't count primary home | (–) |
| Existing life cover | Employer term, etc. | (–) | |
| Spouse income | If spouse also earns | (–) | |
| Recommended cover | = A + B + C – D | - | ₹_______ |
Step-by-step: choosing the right cover
1) Clear liabilities first
Your family shouldn’t inherit your EMIs. Start with:
- Home loan
- Personal loans/credit cards
- Business loans (if family is responsible)
2) Replace income (or expenses)
A practical approach is expenses-based:
- Estimate current monthly expenses
- Multiply by 12
- Multiply by 10–15 years (more if kids are young)
3) Add goal-based buffers
Common big-ticket goals:
- Children’s education (India + abroad)
- Special needs dependent care
- Parent medical support (if they rely on you)
4) Subtract assets carefully
Subtract liquid, accessible assets. Don’t count:
- Your primary residence (family still needs it)
- Illiquid assets that take time to sell
How tenure and cover interact
If you choose a shorter tenure, you may need higher cover (less time to build assets). Tenure guide: Term insurance tenure
Common mistakes
- Buying “10× salary” blindly without considering liabilities and expenses
- Underestimating inflation for goals
- Assuming employer cover is permanent
- Choosing cover based on premium comfort instead of need
Related articles (internal links)
- Cross-cluster: Nominee vs legal heir
FAQs
Should I use salary multiple or expense method?
Use liabilities + expense replacement + goals. Salary multiples are rough shortcuts.
Should both spouses buy term insurance?
If both contribute income or care responsibilities, often yes.
Do I need term insurance if I have no loans?
If you have dependents who rely on your income, yes-expense replacement matters even without loans.
Can I reduce cover as my liabilities reduce?
Some plans allow decreasing cover options; otherwise you can buy additional cover later and plan holistically.
Should I include future home loan plans?
If you are very likely to take a loan soon, you can add some buffer, but don’t overbuy purely on speculation.
Does higher cover increase claim problems?
Claim outcomes depend more on honest disclosure and documentation than cover amount.
Is employer-provided term cover enough?
Usually no, because it can stop when you change jobs and may be insufficient.
Disclaimer: Educational content only. Use a personalised calculation for your situation.
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