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New Year, New Policy: Life Insurance Resolutions for 2027
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New Year, New Policy: Life Insurance Resolutions for 2027

5 min readBy TermHaven Team
Last updated:Published:

Seven life insurance resolutions for 2027, from closing coverage gaps to optimizing health for better rates and updating beneficiaries.

New Year, New Policy: Life Insurance Resolutions for 2027

As 2026 comes to a close and you begin thinking about New Year's resolutions, most people focus on fitness goals, career ambitions, or saving more money. But there is one resolution that could have a more profound impact on your family's future than any gym membership: getting your life insurance in order. Whether you need a brand-new policy, an update to existing coverage, or a complete overhaul of your protection strategy, the start of a new year is the perfect time to act.

Why January Is the Ideal Time to Buy Life Insurance

There is a practical reason to purchase life insurance in January rather than waiting until later in the year. Life insurance premiums are calculated based on your age at the time the policy is issued. Many insurers use your actual birthday, while others use your nearest birthday, meaning your rate could increase up to six months before your actual birthday. By applying in January, you maximize the time at your current age before the next birthday-related rate increase.

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The financial impact is real. For a healthy 35-year-old, waiting one year to purchase a $500,000, 20-year term life insurance policy could increase the total cost by $600 to $1,200 over the life of the policy. For a 45-year-old, the annual age-related increase is even steeper, potentially adding $1,500 to $3,000 in total premiums. Every month of delay costs money.

Resolution 1: Close Your Coverage Gap

If you already have life insurance, your first resolution should be to verify that your coverage amount matches your current needs. Pull out your policy documents and add up the total death benefit across all policies including employer group coverage.

Then calculate your current need: 10 to 15 times your annual income, plus your mortgage balance, plus any other outstanding debts, plus your children's estimated education costs, minus your liquid savings and investments. If there is a gap between what you have and what you need, resolve to close it in January.

Use our coverage calculator for a detailed, personalized assessment. Many people discover their coverage gap has grown by $200,000 to $500,000 since their last policy purchase due to income growth, a larger mortgage, or additional children.

Resolution 2: Buy Your First Policy

If you are among the 102 million American adults who LIMRA reports are underinsured or uninsured, make 2027 the year you change that. The most common reason people give for not having life insurance is that they think it costs too much. The reality is that a healthy 30-year-old can get $500,000 in 20-year term coverage for $25 to $35 per month, less than a streaming subscription bundle.

Start with term life insurance if you are on a budget. It provides the most death benefit per premium dollar and covers the years when your family's financial dependency on you is greatest. You can always add whole life or other permanent coverage later as your budget allows.

Resolution 3: Update Your Beneficiaries

This takes five minutes and could save your family thousands of dollars and months of legal headaches. Your life insurance beneficiary designation overrides your will. If your beneficiary information is outdated, such as an ex-spouse still listed, the proceeds will go to the named beneficiary regardless of your current wishes or what your will says.

Log into each insurance company's website or call their customer service line. Verify that your primary and contingent beneficiaries are current. If you have married, divorced, had children, or experienced any other family change since you last updated your designations, make the change now.

Resolution 4: Review Your Policy Type

Is term insurance still the right fit, or have your needs shifted toward permanent coverage? If your term policy is within five years of expiring, you need a plan. Options include renewing at a higher rate, converting to a permanent policy using your conversion privilege, or applying for a new policy at current rates.

If you own a whole life or universal life policy, review the annual statement. Check the cash value accumulation, current dividend or crediting rate, and projected performance. For universal life in particular, ensure the policy is adequately funded to prevent an unexpected lapse.

Resolution 5: Optimize Your Health for Better Rates

If you plan to apply for a new policy or want to requalify for better rates, January is the time to start improving your health profile. Insurance underwriters weigh these factors heavily in determining your rate classification.

Quitting tobacco is the single most impactful change. Most insurers require 12 months of tobacco-free status to qualify for non-smoker rates, which are 50% to 70% lower than smoker rates. If you quit in January, you could qualify for non-smoker rates by the following January.

Losing weight to achieve a healthier BMI can move you from standard to preferred classification, saving 15% to 25% on premiums. Getting your cholesterol, blood pressure, and blood glucose under control with medication and lifestyle changes demonstrates responsible health management that underwriters reward with better rates.

Resolution 6: Ladder Your Coverage

If you have a single large term policy, consider whether a laddered approach would serve you better and cost less. Laddering means owning multiple policies with different term lengths that expire as your financial obligations decrease.

For example, instead of a single $1.5 million 30-year policy, you might carry a $750,000 30-year policy for long-term income replacement, a $500,000 20-year policy that expires when your mortgage is paid off, and a $250,000 10-year policy that expires when your youngest child becomes independent. The total coverage starts at $1.5 million and decreases over time as your needs decrease, at a lower total premium cost than a single large policy.

Resolution 7: Have the Conversation with Your Spouse

Many couples avoid talking about life insurance because it requires confronting mortality. But an honest conversation about what would happen financially if one of you died is essential to building a solid protection plan.

Sit down together and discuss each person's coverage needs independently. Agree on target coverage amounts for each spouse. Review your current policies and identify gaps. Discuss how the surviving spouse would manage childcare, mortgage payments, and daily expenses. Make decisions together about policy types, coverage amounts, and budget allocation.

Making Your Resolutions Stick

Unlike fitness resolutions that require daily discipline, life insurance resolutions require a single focused effort followed by ongoing protection. Here is a simple January action plan.

Week one: gather all existing policy documents and calculate your current total coverage. Week two: calculate your current coverage need and identify any gap. Use our coverage calculator. Week three: get quotes from multiple insurers for the coverage you need. Week four: choose the best policy, complete the application, and schedule your medical exam if required.

By February 1, you can have a new policy application in process, putting you on track to start 2027 fully protected. Explore our state-specific guides and life stage resources for advice tailored to your situation.

The best resolution you can make this year is the one that protects your family for every year that follows.

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#new year
#resolutions
#financial planning

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