This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with County of San Diego

Your EAP offers these great resources.

How Much Life Insurance Do I Need?

What to consider when determing the amount of life insurance tobuy.

If you are in the market to buy life insurance, the big question is: How much? Unfortunately, the answer is not always easy. There are many different methods of calculating how much life insurance you need ranging from the simple to the complex.

Asking around often contributes to the confusion. Your friendly neighborhood life insurance agent may provide you with an astonishing amount. Financial planners' answers vary, often depending on how they are compensated (fee-based or commission) or on the software they use. Popular financial publications and columns may provide you with a different figure sometimes out of whack with reality.

Luckily, when it comes to calculating life insurance, simpler is often better. This article describes the basic concepts you need to know in determining how much life insurance to buy and explains how to make the best use of available online help. (To determine if you need life insurance, read the article Do I Need Life Insurance? To learn about the different types of life insurance available, see Life Insurance Options.)

Choose a Calculation Method

Most of the hundreds of life insurance calculation methods can be categorized into several broad categories. The best methods focus on what the actual needs of your survivors will be if you die.

Estimating Principal to Generate Adequate Income

In this method, you estimate the amount of principal needed to generate the annual income that your survivors will need once you are gone. For example, if you determine that your survivors will need $70,000 per year, you might purchase life insurance in the amount of $1,000,000 ($1,000,000 would yield an annual income stream of $70,000 a year at a 7% interest rate).

The key to this method is determining how much annual income your survivors will need. Get a pencil and paper and work through the following steps. Or, if you plan to use an online calculator (see "Getting Online Help," below), review the formula below so you understand the concepts and can choose a calculator that works for you. Here's what to do:

Step One. Determine annual income needs. Determine the annual income your family would need if you were to die today. Consider any lifestyle changes that might happen after the death, and include current expenses, such as mortgage, rent, groceries, clothing, utility bills, entertainment, travel, transportation, and child care.

Step Two. Subtract available income from annual income needs. Subtract any other income, such as employment income, dividends, interest income, and current or estimated social security benefits that would start when the insured dies. This will result in the annual income to be replaced.

Step Three. Determine the principal needed to generate income to be replaced. Use the number you get in Step Two and use the following formula to determine how much principal is needed at a reasonable rate of return: (annual income to be replaced) ÷ (rate of return) = amount of principal needed.

For example, if your rate of return is 7% and the annual income to be replaced is $70,000, then you would need to buy $1,000,000 worth of life insurance ($70,000 ÷ .07 = $1,000,000).

Step Four. Add one-time expenses. Add up any one-time expense your survivors will have to pay, including funeral expenses (the average cost of an adult funeral is about $10,000), administrative expenses to wrap up the deceased person's estate, costs of paying off outstanding debt (mortgage or credit card debt), and college costs. Add this number to the principal (the number you get in Step Three).

Step Five. Subtract one-time gains. Add up any one-time income gains, such as proceeds from other life insurance policies, assets from selling a business, or other payouts. Subtract this number from the number you get in Step Four. This final number is the amount of life insurance you need to buy.

Multiple of Income Method

A simpler method is to simply multiply your annual income by a set number (anywhere from 5 to 15) to come up with an amount of life insurance to purchase. Although this method may be a good starting point, it is inexact at best. It doesn't tell you what the actual needs of your survivors will be.

Human Life Value

In this method (commonly used in litigation), you ask the following: If you had been killed in a car accident last week, and someone else had been responsible for your death, how much money would your family sue the responsible party for? Although this approach is featured in a number of websites and online calculators, it is not typically used by professional advisors. The amount determined by this method will usually be significantly higher than the amount determined by other methods and is generally not in line with actual needs.

Tailor Your Life Insurance Policies to Life's Changes

One of the most common errors in calculating life insurance is assuming that your survivors' future income needs will be the same as their current needs. For many families, this is not the case. For example, say you want your life insurance to provide for your minor children if you die. At some point, however, your children will no longer be dependent on you (or your income). At that point, you want your life insurance coverage to change accordingly.

Here's how to deal with these inevitable changes in income needs:

Purchase multiple policies. For starters, buy different policies with different fixed level premium periods. For example, if you need life insurance for your children for ten years but need it for 30 years for your spouse, buy a ten-year level premium policy to cover your children and buy a separate 30-year level premium policy to cover your spouse.

Revisit your financial situation. Of course, you won't be able to anticipate all of life's changes at the time you first purchase life insurance. So revisit your financial situation periodically. If an unexpected change in your life necessitates more life insurance, then buy more. Likewise, if something happens that eliminates or reduces your need for life insurance, then cancel a policy or get another policy for less coverage.

Getting Online Help

Online calculators and worksheets can assist you in determining how much income your survivors will need and how much life insurance you should buy to generate this income stream.

Before you turn to these calculators, however, make sure you understand the basic concepts behind calculating how much life insurance you need to provide for your survivors (as described above). This will help you sort through the many calculators and choose the one that makes sense to you.

In addition, resist the temptation to use calculators that are extremely detailed. Because your needs will change (based on your changing assets and income, as well as due to major life events such as children graduating from college, retirement, and moving), it's best to be general rather than specific.

Some places to start for online help include:

  • Life and Health Insurance Foundation for Education (LIFE). LIFE's website (www.life-line.org) includes a calculator for determining how much life insurance you need.
  • The Insurance Information Institute. The Institute's website (www.iii.org) contains information and a calculator to determine insurance needs and planning priorities at different stages of your life.

To learn more about getting life insurance, along with the other legal and financial steps you should take to protect your loved ones, get The Mom's Guide to Wills & Estate Planning, by Liza Hanks (Nolo).

http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/how-much-life-insurance-do-29682.html

More about this Topics

  • When Your Parent Loses a Mate: How to Help

  • Avoiding Probate: The Small Estate

  • How Living Trusts Avoid Probate

  • Durable Financial Power of Attorney: How it Works

  • Providing for Your Pet After You Die

Other Topics

    • Birth Death Divorce or Marriage Records
    • American Bar Association
    • Advice to Trustees: Get Along With Beneficiaries
    • Foreclosure FAQ
    • Helping an Elder Make a Power of Attorney
    • What Does an Executor Do?
    • Claiming Pensions, Veterans, and Other Benefits: Information for Executors and Beneficiaries
    • Power of Attorney for Finances (Limited Power)
    • Notice of Revocation of Power of Attorney
    • Will Codicil
    • Obituary Information Fact Sheet
    • Will for Adult With Child(ren)
    • Getting Your Affairs in Order
    • Responsibilities of an Executor
    • Living Wills and Powers of Attorney for Health Care: How They Work
    • Estate Planning for the Middle Class: Part 2—The Will
    • Are You Prepared?