Kingsview Wealth Blog

Quick Answers: How Much Life Insurance Do You Actually Need?

Written by Kingsview Wealth | Feb 18, 2026 5:39:14 PM

Life insurance is about protecting the people who would feel the impact of your absence. And while every family’s needs are different, there are a few reliable frameworks that help you land on a clear, defensible coverage amount.

1. The 10× Income Rule

A simple starting point: aim for a death benefit worth 10 times your annual income. It’s fast, intuitive, and works for many households, but it can miss key expenses like debt, childcare, or a spouse who doesn't earn income.

Best for:

  • Early-career families

  • Households wanting a quick benchmark

  • Situations where income is stable and expenses aren’t complex

2. Needs-Based Planning (The Most Accurate Approach)

This method calculates what your family would actually need — instead of using a broad rule of thumb.

Key components usually include:

  • Mortgage and other liabilities

  • Education goals for children

  • Income replacement for a spouse or partner

  • Final expenses and medical costs

  • Emergency reserves

Because it’s customized, it adapts to rising tuition costs, inflation, and specific lifestyle needs.

Best for:

  • Dual-income families

  • Households with large financial goals to protect

  • Anyone with substantial debt or a high cost of living

3. The DIME Formula (Debt, Income, Mortgage, Education)

A crisp formula for quick but structured planning:

  • Debt: credit cards, loans, other liabilities

  • Income: number of years your household needs support

  • Mortgage: remaining balance

  • Education: future tuition for children

It’s more comprehensive than the 10× rule but still easy to calculate in a few minutes.

Best for:

  • Parents with young children

  • Households with meaningful mortgage obligations

  • People who want a middle-ground between quick math and full planning

Which Method Works Best in 2026?

For most families, needs-based planning produces the most accurate number — especially with rising expenses, higher interest rates, and multi-stage financial goals. But starting with the 10× rule or DIME formula can help you understand your baseline and whether your current coverage is close to the mark.

If you haven’t reviewed your insurance coverage in several years, now is a smart time to revisit it. Small gaps today can become real liabilities later.