• Self-employed mortgage
  • Landlords + second homes

    SDLT deep dives

    All property content →
  • For Teachers + Parents Find an Adviser
    Insurance literacy

    Family income benefit — UK 2026/27

    Family income benefit (FIB) is term life insurance that pays a monthly income rather than a lump sum. If you die during the term, your family receives a regular tax-free payment for the remainder of the policy. It's underused in UK retail and often genuinely cheaper than equivalent lump-sum term cover — especially valuable for families who'd find managing a large lump sum challenging during bereavement.

    Educational only. Insurance product selection depends on individual circumstances. Not financial advice.

    What family income benefit is

    FIB is a term life insurance variant. The structure:

    Like all term life, if you survive the term, the policy ends with no payout.

    Why FIB is structurally clever

    Two reasons FIB often serves UK families better than equivalent lump-sum term life:

    1. Cheaper for equivalent coverage

    FIB premiums are typically 20-40% lower than equivalent total-payout level term life. Why? Because the AVERAGE payout under FIB is much smaller than the maximum:

    2. Behavioural advantages

    Receiving a large lump sum during bereavement is psychologically difficult. Families often:

    A regular monthly income replicates the deceased's salary — familiar, manageable, harder to mismanage. The family can adjust to the loss gradually rather than facing immediate financial decisions about a large pot.

    FIB vs lump-sum term — worked comparison

    Scenario: 35-year-old non-smoker, 20-year term, wants to replace £30,000/year of after-tax income (roughly £40,000 gross salary).

    Option A: FIB with £30,000/year benefit

    Option B: Level term life with £500,000 sum assured

    Which is better?

    It depends on the family's situation:

    When FIB is the right choice

    Families with young children

    Childcare and family expenses are highest while children are young and tapering as they grow. FIB's structure matches this naturally: highest total payout if you die when kids are youngest; lower if you die when kids are nearly independent.

    Surviving spouse won't be a confident investor

    If your spouse would struggle to manage a £500k lump sum, FIB's monthly income matches their normal cashflow expectations. They don't need to make investment decisions; they don't need to budget a lump sum across 20 years.

    Cost-sensitive families

    The 20-40% premium savings vs level term make FIB attractive for families on tight budgets. Same protection during the years it's most needed, lower monthly outgoing.

    When FIB is not ideal

    If you need a definite lump sum at death (mortgage, IHT)

    For mortgage protection or IHT planning, you need a defined lump sum to pay off a defined liability. FIB's tapering payout doesn't match a fixed mortgage balance. Use level or decreasing term for these specific needs; FIB on top for income replacement.

    If your spouse is financially sophisticated

    A confident investor would prefer a lump sum to manage themselves — potentially earning a better long-term return than FIB's effective interest rate (which is essentially zero; you get back what you pay in plus the insurance margin).

    If you want maximum flexibility for beneficiaries

    Lump-sum term life gives beneficiaries complete flexibility about how to use the money. FIB locks them into receiving income over years. For some families this is a feature; for others it's restrictive.

    Combining FIB with other cover (the common UK pattern)

    Many UK retail families use a layered approach:

    This stack covers most realistic bad outcomes:

    Total cost for a 35-year-old non-smoker: typically £60-£120 per month for comprehensive cover across all four. Less than a typical mobile phone contract.

    Key UK FIB providers (2026/27)

    Most major UK life insurers offer FIB but it's less heavily marketed than lump-sum term, so customers often don't know to ask for it.

    Indexation — protecting against inflation

    FIB benefits are typically fixed in nominal terms — if you set £30,000/year today, it pays £30,000/year even 20 years from now (significantly less in real terms after inflation).

    Most insurers offer "indexed" or "rising" FIB:

    Worth considering for long terms (15+ years) where inflation will materially erode fixed benefits. Annual indexation typically increases premium by 10-30% over the static-benefit version.

    FIB in trust — usually a good idea

    Like lump-sum life insurance, FIB benefits paid to your estate would face IHT and probate delays. Writing FIB in trust:

    Insurers provide trust forms free. The trust holds the FIB policy; trustees receive the monthly payments and pass them to beneficiaries. See our life insurance in trust guide for the mechanics.

    Detailed cost comparison

    Indicative monthly premiums, 30-year-old non-smoker, 25-year term:

    Product Sum / annual benefit Monthly premium Maximum payout
    Level term life£500,000 sum assured£15-£25£500,000
    Decreasing term life (mortgage)£300k initial, reducing£10-£18£300,000 falling to ~£0
    FIB£30,000/year for remaining term£12-£20£750k (if dies y1) down to £30k (if dies y24)
    FIB (indexed at 3%/yr)£30k/yr rising 3%/yr£15-£25Higher in nominal terms; preserves real value

    Frequently asked questions

    Is FIB tax-free for beneficiaries?

    Yes, if written in trust. The monthly payments are tax-free income to the beneficiaries because they come from a life insurance payout (which is not income or capital gains for tax purposes). Without trust, the payments would form part of the estate for IHT but the income itself isn't separately taxed.

    Can the family receive FIB as a single lump sum on claim?

    Some FIB policies offer this as an option — "commutation" of the remaining benefit into a present-value lump sum. The discount applied means the lump sum is less than the total of expected future payments. Useful flexibility but doesn't necessarily make sense (the regular income structure is the product's main feature).

    Can FIB be combined with critical illness?

    Some insurers offer "FIB with CIC" — the monthly income starts paying not just on death but also on diagnosis of a critical illness. Less common than standalone FIB or standalone CIC; check provider options.

    Does FIB cover suicide?

    Most UK life insurance (including FIB) excludes suicide in the first 12-24 months of the policy. After that exclusion period, suicide is typically covered. Check the specific policy.

    What if I get a pay rise?

    The FIB benefit is locked at the level you set at policy inception. To increase cover, you'd typically need to take out an additional FIB policy or replace with a higher-benefit one (requiring new underwriting). Some policies have "guaranteed insurability options" for specific life events (marriage, child birth) without re-underwriting.

    Why isn't FIB more popular?

    It's underused largely because insurers don't market it heavily — lump-sum term has clearer "I'll pay you £500k" marketing, while FIB requires explaining the income structure. Comparison sites default to lump-sum term. But for income-replacement scenarios, FIB is often the right answer; ask your adviser specifically about it.

    Editorial accountability
    Open Trust Centre →

    Every page is reviewed against the editorial standards, written from primary sources, sourced openly, and corrected publicly. No affiliate revenue. No sponsored content. No paid placements.

    Editorial standards Editorial process Corrections policy How we make money Editorial team Methodology
    Cookie settings