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How Credit Score Affects Life Insurance (It Doesn''t, But...)
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How Credit Score Affects Life Insurance (It Doesn''t, But...)

5 min readBy TermHaven Team
Last updated:Published:

Your credit score does not affect life insurance rates, but financial behavior matters indirectly. Learn what underwriters actually evaluate and what they ignore.

How Credit Score Affects Life Insurance (It Doesn't, But...)

One of the most common questions people ask about life insurance is whether their credit score affects their ability to get coverage or the premium they pay. The short answer is no: life insurance companies do not use your credit score to determine your rates. But the full picture is more nuanced, and there are indirect ways your financial behavior can influence your insurance experience.

Life Insurance Does Not Use Credit Scores

Unlike auto insurance and homeowners insurance, which frequently use credit-based insurance scores to help determine premiums, life insurance underwriting does not consider your credit score, credit history, or any credit-based metric. Your FICO score is irrelevant to your life insurance application.

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Life insurance premiums are determined by:

  • Your age at the time of application
  • Your gender
  • Your health history and current health status
  • Your tobacco use
  • Your family medical history
  • Your occupation and hobbies
  • The amount and type of coverage you are applying for

Your credit score is not on that list. Whether your score is 850 or 500, the underwriting process is the same.

Why Life Insurance Is Different from Other Insurance

Auto and home insurance companies use credit scores because statistical data shows a correlation between credit behavior and the likelihood of filing claims. People with lower credit scores tend to file more auto and home insurance claims.

Life insurance does not work the same way because your credit score has no correlation with your life expectancy. A person with excellent credit does not live longer than a person with poor credit, all else being equal. Since life insurance pricing is entirely based on mortality risk, credit scores have no predictive value.

The MIB Report: What Insurers Actually Check

While life insurance companies do not pull your credit report, they do access the Medical Information Bureau (MIB) database. The MIB is a specialized consumer reporting agency used exclusively by life, health, and disability insurers.

The MIB report contains coded information about previous life and health insurance applications, including medical conditions disclosed or discovered during underwriting, hazardous activities, and other risk factors. If you applied for life insurance five years ago and disclosed diabetes, that information may appear on your MIB report when you apply with a different carrier.

The MIB does not contain credit information. It is strictly a medical and insurance history database.

Prescription Database Checks

Insurance companies also access pharmacy databases to verify prescription history. This is not a credit check but an independent verification of medications you have been prescribed. If your application says you have no health conditions but the pharmacy database shows prescriptions for blood pressure medication, the underwriter will investigate the discrepancy.

How Financial Behavior Indirectly Affects Your Insurance

While your credit score does not directly impact premiums, your financial behavior can affect your life insurance experience in several indirect ways.

Bankruptcy and life insurance. Filing for bankruptcy does not prevent you from obtaining life insurance, and it does not affect your premiums. However, as we discussed in our bankruptcy and life insurance guide, the cash value of permanent policies may be affected by bankruptcy proceedings depending on your state's exemption laws.

Income verification. When you apply for a large amount of coverage, the insurer verifies that your income supports the coverage amount. This is called financial underwriting. If your income does not justify the death benefit you are requesting, the insurer may reduce the approved amount. This is not a credit check but an income and asset review.

Premium payment history. If you have a history of missed premium payments or policy lapses, some insurers may view you as a higher administrative risk. This does not affect your health-based rate classification but may limit which insurers are willing to accept your application.

Debt and coverage needs. Your level of debt directly affects how much life insurance you need. High debt levels mean you need more coverage to protect your family. This does not affect your per-dollar rate but increases the total premium you pay because you need a larger policy.

What About Auto and Home Insurance Credit Scores?

To be clear about the distinction: many auto and home insurance companies use a credit-based insurance score, which is different from your FICO score but derived from similar credit report data. These scores are used to predict the likelihood of filing insurance claims.

This practice is controversial and banned in some states for auto insurance (California, Hawaii, Massachusetts) and limited in others. But regardless of the debate around credit scores in property and casualty insurance, the practice simply does not extend to life insurance.

Things That Actually Affect Your Life Insurance Rate

If you are concerned about your life insurance premiums, focus on the factors that underwriters actually evaluate.

Tobacco use. This is the single biggest rate factor you can control. Smokers pay two to four times more than non-smokers. Quitting smoking and being tobacco-free for at least 12 months (some carriers require 24 months) qualifies you for non-smoker rates.

Weight management. Your height-to-weight ratio affects your rate classification. Achieving a healthier BMI can move you from Standard to Preferred rates.

Blood pressure control. Well-managed blood pressure with medication is viewed favorably. Uncontrolled hypertension significantly increases rates.

Cholesterol levels. Total cholesterol, HDL, LDL, and triglyceride levels influence underwriting decisions. Improved numbers through diet, exercise, or medication help your rate.

Driving record. DUIs, reckless driving, and multiple moving violations within the past five years can affect your rate classification or even lead to a decline.

Drug and alcohol history. Substance abuse history, particularly recent use, is a significant underwriting concern.

The Bottom Line

Your credit score does not affect your life insurance premiums. Period. If you have poor credit but good health, you can qualify for the same rates as someone with excellent credit and the same health profile.

Do not let credit concerns prevent you from applying for life insurance. Your family's financial protection depends on your mortality risk factors, not your financial ones. Get a free quote to see what rates are available based on your actual health profile, or use our coverage calculator to determine how much coverage your family needs.

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#credit score
#underwriting
#insurance myths
#rate factors

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