Term vs whole life insurance: which should you choose?
Why most families are better served by pure term cover — and the few situations where other plans make sense.
Life insurance comes in many flavours, but the core decision is simple: do you want pure protection, or protection bundled with savings? Understanding that split makes almost every other choice fall into place.
What term insurance actually is
A term plan is pure protection. You pay a relatively small premium, and if you pass away during the policy term, your family receives a large payout. If you outlive the term, there's usually no payout — and that's the point. You're buying peace of mind, not a return. Because there's no savings component, the cover you get per rupee is far higher than any bundled plan.
Where bundled plans fit in
Endowment, money-back and whole-life plans combine insurance with a savings or investment element. They feel attractive because you 'get something back', but that comes at a cost: much higher premiums for much lower cover, and returns that often trail simpler options. For most families focused on protecting their income, the maths favours term.
A simple rule of thumb
- Need maximum protection for your family at the lowest cost? Choose term.
- Want your premiums back if you survive the term? A return-of-premium term plan does this, at a higher cost.
- Looking to combine insurance with disciplined long-term savings and you value that simplicity? A bundled plan may suit — but compare the returns honestly first.
How much term cover to buy
A common benchmark is 10 to 15 times your annual income, adjusted up for outstanding loans and big future goals like a child's education, and down for assets your family already holds. Buy young and healthy and you lock in a low premium for the entire term.
The biggest mistake isn't picking the 'wrong' product — it's buying too little cover, or buying nothing at all. If you're unsure, we'll help you size a plan that genuinely protects your family.
Want this tailored to you?
Book a free call and we'll apply this to your exact situation — no pressure, no spam.
This guide is general information to help you understand your options, not financial or tax advice. Please consider your own circumstances and consult a qualified professional where needed.