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Joint Life Insurance Policies: Pros, Cons, and Alternatives

3 min readBy TermHaven Team

Compare joint life insurance with individual policies. Learn about first-to-die and survivorship coverage, and why most couples benefit more from separate term life policies.

Joint Life Insurance Policies: Pros, Cons, and Alternatives

When couples discuss life insurance, a common question is whether to buy one joint policy or two individual policies. Joint life insurance covers two people under a single policy, which sounds simpler and potentially cheaper. But the reality is more complicated than it appears.

How Joint Life Insurance Works

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A joint policy insures two people (typically spouses) under one policy with one premium. There are two main types:

First-to-Die Joint Policy

The death benefit pays out when the first insured person dies. After the payout, the policy terminates. The surviving spouse is left without coverage. This type is designed to replace income and cover debts when one spouse passes.

Second-to-Die (Survivorship) Joint Policy

The death benefit pays out only after both insured people have died. This is primarily used for estate planning — providing liquidity to pay estate taxes or fund trusts after both parents pass. Second-to-die policies are almost always permanent.

Cost Comparison

Joint first-to-die policies are typically 5 to 15 percent cheaper than two separate individual policies with the same face amount. However, this can be misleading:

ScenarioJoint First-to-DieTwo Individual Policies
Coverage$500,000 (one payout)$500,000 each ($1M total)
Monthly premium (both age 35)~$40~$55 combined
If Spouse A dies$500,000 (policy ends)$500,000 (Spouse B's policy continues)
If Spouse B dies later$0$500,000
Total potential benefit$500,000$1,000,000

The joint policy saves $15 per month but provides $500,000 less in total potential benefit.

Advantages of Joint Policies

  • Lower premiums for the same face amount
  • Simplified management with one policy, one premium
  • Estate planning tool for survivorship policies
  • Easier qualification when one spouse's health offsets the other's

Disadvantages of Joint Policies

The surviving spouse loses coverage. When one spouse dies and the first-to-die policy pays out, the surviving spouse has no coverage. If their health has declined, obtaining new coverage may be expensive or impossible.

Divorce complications. Joint policies become extremely problematic during divorce. Options include surrendering the policy, one spouse buying out the other, or converting to individual policies if the insurer allows it. None are clean.

Less flexibility. Joint policies cannot accommodate different coverage amounts per person.

Limited availability. Fewer insurers offer joint policies, meaning less competition.

When Joint Policies Make Sense

Survivorship policies for estate planning. If your combined estate exceeds the federal estate tax exemption, a second-to-die policy in an irrevocable life insurance trust provides tax-free funds to pay estate taxes.

Cost-sensitive couples. If the premium savings is the difference between having coverage and having none.

The Better Alternative for Most Couples

Two individual term life insurance policies:

  • Each person is independently covered. When one spouse dies, the survivor keeps their own policy.
  • Customized coverage amounts. Each policy matches each person's specific needs.
  • Divorce-proof. Each person takes their own policy. No splitting or complications.
  • More competitive pricing. The individual market is far larger and more competitive.
  • Independent conversion options. Each spouse controls their own long-term strategy.

A Better Strategy

  1. Calculate each spouse's need independently using our coverage calculator.
  2. Buy individual term policies matched to each spouse's needs.
  3. Consider a small whole life policy for permanent needs like final expenses.
  4. Review every three to five years or after major life events.

Get Your Quotes

Get free quotes for both spouses and compare the total cost of individual policies versus a joint approach. Explore our life insurance for families guide for more strategies, or browse our resources for additional planning tools.

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