Whole-of-life vs term life insurance — UK 2026/27
UK life insurance comes in two fundamentally different flavours. Term life pays out only if you die during a defined period (and is cheap because most people don't). Whole-of-life pays out whenever you die, guaranteed (and is much more expensive because eventually the insurer will definitely pay). They serve different needs. Most UK retail wants term; some specific situations — IHT planning, funeral cover — want whole-of-life. Here's how to choose.
The fundamental difference
| Feature | Term life | Whole-of-life |
|---|---|---|
| When it pays out | If you die during the term | Whenever you die (guaranteed payout) |
| Probability of payout | ~5-15% (most people outlive the term) | 100% (everyone dies) |
| Premium | Cheap (£8-£25/mo for £250k cover) | Expensive (£100-£300+/mo for £250k cover) |
| Investment element | None | Some policies have cash value / surrender value |
| Premium structure | Usually level (guaranteed) | Can be guaranteed, reviewable, or "with profits" |
| Typical use case | Protecting dependants during specific period | IHT planning; final expenses; estate equalisation |
Why term is cheap and whole-of-life is expensive
The cost difference reflects probability of payout:
- Term life: a 30-year-old buying 25-year term insurance has roughly a 90% chance of outliving the policy. The insurer pays in only ~10% of cases. Premium reflects the expected payout (low) plus admin and profit margin.
- Whole-of-life: a 30-year-old buying whole-of-life will definitely die one day. The insurer will definitely pay. The premium has to cover the full eventual payout, plus admin, plus the insurer's risk that you die earlier than the actuarial life expectancy.
Rule of thumb: whole-of-life costs 5-15x term life for equivalent cover, depending on age at purchase. The differential narrows for older buyers (who have less time before payout).
When whole-of-life genuinely makes sense
1. IHT planning
The classic whole-of-life use case. If your estate is likely to face significant inheritance tax (40% above the thresholds), a whole-of-life policy written in trust can provide the cash to pay the IHT bill, preserving the actual estate for beneficiaries.
Example: £2m estate facing ~£600k IHT. Take out a £600k whole-of-life policy in trust. When you die, the policy pays £600k tax-free into the trust, which is used to pay the IHT bill. The full £2m estate passes to beneficiaries without forced asset sales.
Cost: a 55-year-old non-smoker might pay £600-£1,000+ per month for £600k whole-of-life. Over 25 years to age 80: £180-£300k in premiums. The trade-off: avoiding forced sale of family business, property, etc. Often worth it for genuinely large estates.
2. Funeral / final expenses cover
Many over-50s buy small whole-of-life policies (£3-£15k cover) specifically to fund their funeral. Marketed as "Over-50s plans" by Sun Life, Aviva, etc. These are typically:
- Small sums (£3k-£15k)
- No underwriting (just age verification)
- Guaranteed acceptance ages 50-80
- Premiums £10-£50/month
- Frequently you pay more in premiums than you receive in payout
Over-50s plans are often poor value in pure financial terms — you'd be better off saving the £15-£30/month into an ISA which would grow to many times the payout amount. But for people who won't or can't save, the simplicity of guaranteed funeral cover has behavioural value.
3. Estate equalisation
If you have multiple beneficiaries and your estate is composed of indivisible assets (a family business, a unique property), whole-of-life can provide cash to equalise inheritances. E.g. leave the business to one child; use the whole-of-life proceeds to give equivalent cash to the other.
4. Key person / business protection
For business owners, whole-of-life on a key person can provide ongoing protection that doesn't expire. Less common than term in business protection but used in some scenarios.
When term life is the right answer (most retail cases)
Protect dependants during their dependent years
Children become financially independent at 18-25. Spouses become more financially robust as the mortgage shrinks and savings grow. Term cover until your youngest child is 21 + mortgage cleared is usually enough.
Cover the mortgage
Term life matching the mortgage term ensures the property is paid off if you die. Either level term (paying off + extra) or decreasing term (paying off the mortgage exactly).
Affordable peace of mind
Term is the budget-friendly option that meets the core need for most UK families. The "I should have life insurance" itch is scratched without taking up a significant portion of disposable income.
Worked 30-year cost comparison
Scenario: 35-year-old non-smoker, healthy, wants £200,000 of cover.
Option A: 30-year level term life
- Monthly premium: ~£15
- 30-year total cost: £5,400
- Probability of payout: ~10-15%
- If no claim: cover ends at age 65 with no payout. Buyer has spent £5,400 on peace of mind.
- If claim: £200,000 paid to beneficiaries.
Option B: Whole-of-life £200,000 cover
- Monthly premium: ~£130 at age 35 (guaranteed level)
- 30-year total cost (to age 65): £46,800
- Probability of payout: 100% (eventually)
- Continues to age >65: if you live to 85, you pay another 20 years at ~£130/mo = £31,200, total premiums paid £78,000
- Eventually pays £200,000 to beneficiaries
Option C: Term + DIY savings
- Buy term life: £15/mo
- Invest the difference (£130 − £15 = £115/mo) into a stocks & shares ISA
- At 5% real return over 30 years: ISA grows to ~£90,000
- At 7% real return: ISA grows to ~£135,000
- At 65, you have: term life (about to expire, no claim assumed) + a £90-£135k ISA pot you can use however you want
- If you'd died during the term: term life pays £200k AND the ISA passes to your spouse (tax-free if inherited via spouse exemption)
Option C usually wins for the majority of cases — you get effectively the same protection during the years you most need it, plus a substantial savings pot you genuinely control. The "buy term and invest the difference" approach is one of the oldest pieces of personal finance advice for good reason.
The four whole-of-life variants
Guaranteed premium WOL
Premium fixed at outset, level for life. Most expensive at outset but no nasty surprises. The "right" version for IHT planning where you need certainty.
Reviewable premium WOL
Premium reviewed periodically (typically every 10 years from age 70). Insurer can increase premiums based on policy fund performance or actuarial assumptions. Cheaper initially but can become very expensive later. Be very careful with reviewable WOL — older policies have seen premiums rise to 4-5x original levels at first review, leaving holders with a difficult choice between paying massive premiums or losing cover.
With-profits WOL
Linked to a with-profits investment fund. Bonus payments accumulate on top of basic sum assured. Older product type; complex; sales of with-profits policies are largely declining in the UK.
Universal life / unit-linked WOL
Hybrid product: a savings account with insurance element. Cash value accumulates; you can borrow against it. Premium flexibility. Common in US; less so in UK. Often confusing; charges can be opaque.
Over-50s plans — the marketing-driven WOL product
"Over-50s life insurance" is heavily marketed by Sun Life of Canada, Aviva, Royal London etc. Common features:
- Sum assured: £3,000-£15,000 (small)
- Guaranteed acceptance: no health questions, no medical, no underwriting
- Premiums payable: typically £10-£50/month for life (or sometimes "premiums end at 90")
- Initial period: most have a 12-24 month "moratorium" where death is only covered by accident, not illness
- Funeral support: some include funeral planning support, basic funeral packages
The maths: a 60-year-old paying £20/month for £5,000 cover. If they live to 80, they pay 20 × 12 × 20 = £4,800. They receive £5,000. Effective return: ~0.2% per year, before inflation. Inflation-adjusted: significantly negative.
Why people buy them anyway:
- Guaranteed acceptance (no health questions) is real value for people who'd struggle to qualify for underwritten cover
- Predictable funeral funding without estate-administration concerns
- Behavioural commitment to setting funds aside (some people won't save)
- Marketing makes them feel like a responsible action
For most over-50s with the discipline to save, putting the same monthly amount into a Cash ISA at 4-5% interest would produce a larger pot. But for genuinely uninsurable individuals or those who won't save, an over-50s plan has practical value.
Decision framework
Pick term life if you...
- Have dependants needing protection for a defined period (children, spouse, mortgage)
- Want maximum cover per £ of premium
- Are comfortable that you may "outlive" the policy without claiming
- Already invest separately for long-term wealth
- Are healthy and underwriting will be favourable
This describes the majority of UK retail. Term life is the right default product.
Pick whole-of-life if you...
- Have an estate likely to face significant IHT and want cash to pay it
- Have a specific lifelong protection need (e.g. funding a disabled child's care)
- Want guaranteed cover regardless of when you die
- Are over 60+ and struggling to qualify for affordable term cover
- Want guaranteed acceptance (over-50s plans specifically)
You might want both if you...
- Have a large estate (term for children's dependency years; whole-of-life for IHT)
- Are in business with key-person protection needs (sometimes WOL for owner; term for employees)
Frequently asked questions
Can I convert term to whole-of-life later?
Some term policies include a "conversion option" allowing you to switch to whole-of-life without medical underwriting. Useful if your circumstances change (e.g. discover you have a serious illness during the term and want to lock in WOL cover). Check policy details; not all term policies include this.
Is whole-of-life a good investment?
Generally no. WOL premiums fund insurance + admin + insurer profit + minimal investment growth. As an investment vehicle, it's almost always worse than buying term + investing the difference into ISAs/pensions. The exception: some IHT planning scenarios where the inherent tax shelter and guaranteed payout structure of WOL serves a specific purpose better than alternatives.
What about "endowment" policies?
Endowment policies pay out either on death OR on a specific maturity date (e.g. 25 years). Popular for mortgage repayment in the 1980s-90s; largely discredited after failure to meet projected returns. Not commonly sold to retail today.
Can I sell my whole-of-life policy?
The UK has a small "traded life policies" market for surrendering whole-of-life policies. Buyers pay a fraction of the eventual payout in exchange for taking over premium payments. Usually you'd get a much worse deal than the policy's actuarial value. Only worth considering for very old policies with high cash value.
Can a whole-of-life policy be put in trust?
Yes, and for IHT planning purposes it usually should be. Same mechanism as term life in trust. The trust holds the policy; the eventual payout goes to beneficiaries free of IHT.
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