Permanent coverage that never expires — plus a cash value account that grows tax-deferred. Here's the honest breakdown.
Get Whole Life Quotes →Whole life is a type of permanent life insurance that covers you for your entire life — not just a set term. It has two components:
The trade-off: whole life costs 5–15x more than an equivalent term life policy.
| Age | Male | Female | Annual Premium | Cash Value at 20 Yrs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | $180/mo | $155/mo | $2,160 | ~$48,000 |
| 30 | $215/mo | $184/mo | $2,580 | ~$52,000 |
| 35 | $268/mo | $229/mo | $3,216 | ~$58,000 |
| 40 | $342/mo | $291/mo | $4,104 | ~$62,000 |
| 45 | $448/mo | $381/mo | $5,376 | ~$64,000 |
| 50 | $601/mo | $509/mo | $7,212 | ~$60,000 |
| Good Fit For | Not Ideal For |
|---|---|
| ✅ Estate planning (passing wealth to heirs) | ❌ Most middle-income families (term is better value) |
| ✅ Business buy-sell agreements | ❌ Young parents who need maximum coverage cheap |
| ✅ High-income earners who've maxed other tax shelters | ❌ People with limited budgets |
| ✅ Funding a special needs trust | ❌ Those who want pure investment growth (index funds outperform) |
| ✅ Permanent guaranteed coverage need | ❌ Temporary needs (mortgage, kids) |
It depends. The internal rate of return on whole life cash value is typically 1–3% — far below what you'd earn in an index fund over the same period. However, whole life provides guaranteed growth with no market risk, plus a death benefit. For most people, "buy term and invest the difference" produces more wealth. But whole life has its place in estate planning strategies.
Yes. You can borrow up to 90% of your cash value, tax-free, at low interest rates. You're not required to repay the loan — but unpaid loans reduce the death benefit paid to your family.
Whole life has fixed premiums and guaranteed growth. Universal life is more flexible — you can adjust premiums and the death benefit — but growth is not guaranteed and it's more complex to manage.
A licensed broker can show you side-by-side numbers for both options based on your situation.
Talk to a Licensed Broker → Compare Term vs Whole Life →