Your Life Insurance Isn’t ‘Portable’ Like You Think (The Employer Coverage Trap)
If you think your employer provided life insurance will stay with you when you leave your job, think again. Group life insurance is a nice workplace benefit, but relying on it as your only protection can leave your family exposed when you least expect it.
Here’s Why
Most employer life insurance plans offer limited coverage, usually 1x or 2x your annual salary. So if you make $80,000 a year, your coverage might top out at $160,000. That’s a start, but it’s rarely enough to replace your income for more than a year or two, let alone pay off debt or support your family long term.
Worse yet, your coverage typically ends when your job does. Some policies offer a “conversion” option, allowing you to switch to an individual policy, but it’s often expensive, and you may lose access to preferred health-based rates. By the time you retire or change jobs, you may be older or less healthy, making it harder to qualify for new policies.
And what if your employer drops or reduces the benefit? You have no control. Even if you’re still employed, company decisions can shrink your coverage with little notice.
According to LIMRA, half of American households would feel financial strain within six months if the primary wage earner died. Life insurance isn’t just a luxury; it’s a lifeline.
Checklist: How Much Life Insurance Do You Actually Need?
- Would you want to fund college for your kids?
- Do you have a mortgage or other large debts?
- Do you have dependents relying on your income?
- Would your spouse need time to get back to work?
- Do you want to cover final expenses and burial costs?
- Do you want to leave a financial cushion, not just a scramble to pay bills?
The Smart Move
Use your work policy as a supplement, not your foundation. Lock in a personally owned term policy while you're young and healthy. That way, you own the coverage, not your employer, and no HR decision can take it away.
You don’t need to cancel your group policy; you just need to make sure it’s not doing all the heavy lifting. Your job might change. Your life might change. But your family's security shouldn't.
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