Most Florida families are significantly underinsured. This guide walks you through calculating your true coverage need — and the 4 most common gaps that leave families exposed.
Add these five numbers together to get your total life insurance need. Most financial planners recommend 10–12× your annual income as a starting point.
The most important factor. Your family needs to replace your income for the years they depend on it.
Formula
Annual income × 10–12 years (or until youngest child is independent)
Example
Earning $65,000/year with a 10-year-old child → $65,000 × 10 = $650,000 minimum
Your family should be able to stay in their home without your income.
Formula
Current mortgage balance (not original loan amount)
Example
Remaining mortgage of $280,000 → add $280,000 to your coverage need
Don't leave your family with your debts. Include all significant liabilities.
Formula
Car loans + student loans + credit card balances + personal loans
Example
Car loan $18,000 + student loans $35,000 = $53,000 additional coverage
Fund your children's education so they don't start life in debt.
Formula
$100,000–$200,000 per child (4-year Florida university + living expenses)
Example
2 children × $120,000 = $240,000 for education funding
Funeral costs, estate settlement, and medical bills not covered by health insurance.
Formula
$15,000–$25,000 (Florida average funeral: $8,000–$12,000 + estate costs)
Example
Add $20,000 as a baseline for final expenses
Quick Estimate for a Florida Family of 4
Income replacement ($650K) + Mortgage ($280K) + Debt ($53K) + Education ($240K) + Final expenses ($20K) = $1,243,000 total need. A 20-year term policy for this amount costs approximately $60–$90/month for a healthy 35-year-old.
For most Florida families, term life is the right answer. Here's how all four types compare.
Duration: 10, 20, or 30 years
Cost: Lowest — $20–$50/month for healthy 35-year-old
Best for: Most families with a mortgage, young children, or income to replace
Pros
Cons
Duration: Permanent (lifetime)
Cost: Highest — 5–15× more than term for same death benefit
Best for: Estate planning, final expense coverage, or guaranteed lifelong coverage
Pros
Cons
Duration: Permanent with flexibility
Cost: Moderate to high
Best for: People who want permanent coverage with flexible premium payments
Pros
Cons
Duration: Permanent
Cost: Moderate — $30–$80/month for $10,000–$25,000 coverage
Best for: Seniors who want to cover funeral costs without burdening family
Pros
Cons
These are the scenarios where Florida families discover — too late — that their coverage was inadequate.
Most employer group life policies offer 1–2× salary. A $65,000 earner gets $65,000–$130,000 in coverage — far below the $500,000+ most families need.
Supplement with a personal term policy. Employer coverage also ends when you leave the job.
The economic value of childcare, household management, and caregiving is $30,000–$50,000/year. If a stay-at-home parent dies, the surviving spouse faces enormous costs.
Insure both spouses. A $250,000–$500,000 term policy on a stay-at-home parent is affordable and critical.
Getting married, having children, buying a home, or getting a raise all change your coverage needs. A policy bought at 25 may be woefully inadequate at 40.
Review your coverage every 3–5 years or after any major life event.
Whole life and universal life policies are often sold as investment vehicles. But the death benefit is usually too small for income replacement, and the fees are high.
Use term for income replacement. Use whole life only for specific estate planning needs.
Our licensed agents will calculate your exact coverage need, compare term and permanent options from multiple carriers, and find the right policy for your family's budget. Free, no pressure.
Licensed Florida life insurance agents · Bilingual English/Spanish · No medical exam required for many policies