Skip nav to main content.

Reviewing Your Life Insurance Needs

May 8, 2024

Life is an ever-evolving journey marked by significant milestones, personal growth, and unexpected changes. As life unfolds, your financial and insurance needs also shift, changing from year to year, decade to decade. A good example of this is life insurance. If you have a life insurance policy that you haven’t reviewed recently, it may no longer align with your current needs. That is why reviewing your life insurance periodically may be a good approach.

Several factors affect the cost and availability of life insurance, including age, health, and the type and amount of insurance purchased. Life insurance policies have expenses, including mortality and other charges. If a policy is surrendered prematurely, the policyholder may also pay surrender charges and face income tax implications. You should consider determining whether you are insurable before implementing a strategy involving life insurance. Any guarantees associated with a policy are dependent on the ability of the issuing insurance company to continue making claim payments.

Understanding the Importance of Periodic Reviews

Some may think that once you secure a life insurance policy, you can set it and forget it. But life insurance isn’t static. Just as your life doesn’t stand still, neither should your life insurance.

Periodic reviews of your policy help keep your life insurance in step with your evolving situation. Changes in your life can impact the role you want life insurance to play.

How to Review Your Life Insurance Needs

Reassessing your life insurance and bringing it in line with your life doesn’t have to be complicated. Here are some suggestions that may help:

The DIME Method

One practical approach to determining your life insurance needs is the DIME method. This method involves adding your Debt, Income, Mortgage, and Education expenses.

  • Debt – Consider all your outstanding debts, excluding your mortgage. This could include credit card debt, personal loans, or car loans.
  • Income – Calculate ten years of your income. This can start to help you understand what financial gaps may occur if you were gone.
  • Mortgage – Add the amount required to pay off your mortgage. Using life insurance proceeds to pay off a mortgage may help your family keep its home.
  • Education – Estimate the cost of your children’s college education. You may want to use a range since costs can vary from school to school.

Life Changes

Has any life-changing event happened to you? These are situations that may alter your needs and responsibilities moving forward.

  • Change in Marital Status – A marriage or a divorce can change your financial situation as well as factors such as your policy’s beneficiary.
  • Birth of Child – A child is a gift. But they are also a financial consideration that you may want to take into account.
  • Change in Employment – A new job or role in your company may change your income, which may cause you to reconsider your life insurance benefit.
  • Buying, Selling, or Paying off a Home – Changes in ownership or the standing of your mortgage can alter your needs and strategy for the future.

The Value of Professional Guidance

While these steps provide a general idea of your life insurance needs, nothing can replace the expertise of a financial professional, who can provide assistance, answer your questions, and guide you through the process. In addition, a financial professional can provide insights into how certain policies are structured and may have thoughts on the life insurance company you may be considering.

Life insurance is not a one-size-fits-all solution. It is a dynamic financial tool that may need to evolve with your life. Periodic reviews can help determine what your family needs, no matter what life brings your way.


Securities and advisory services are offered through LPL Financial (LPL), a registered investment advisor and broker-dealer (Member FINRA/SIPC). Insurance products are offered through LPL or its licensed affiliates. Redwood Credit Union and Redwood Wealth Management are not registered as a broker-dealer or investment advisor. Registered representatives of LPL offer products and services using Redwood Wealth Management, and may also be employees of Redwood Credit Union. These products and services are being offered through LPL or its affiliates, which are separate entities from, and not affiliates of, Redwood Credit Union or Redwood Wealth Management. Securities and insurance offered through LPL or its affiliates are:

Not Insured by NCUA or Any Other Government Agency Not Credit Union Deposits or Obligations Not Credit Union Guaranteed May Lose Value

The LPL Financial registered representative(s) associated with this website may discuss and/or transact business only with residents of the states in which they are properly registered or licensed. No offers may be made or accepted from any resident of any other state.

Your Credit Union (“Financial Institution”) provides referrals to financial professionals of LPL Financial LLC (“LPL”) pursuant to an agreement that allows LPL to pay the Financial Institution for these referrals. This creates an incentive for the Financial Institution to make these referrals, resulting in a conflict of interest. The Financial Institution is not a current client of LPL for brokerage or advisory services.

Please visit https://www.lpl.com/disclosures/is-lpl-relationship-disclosure.html more detailed information.

LPL Financial Form CRS

Test Banner This is a test &&&&&& This is a test Learn More