Rates as of March 2026

59-Year-Old Term Life Insurance Rates

What term life insurance actually costs at age 59, based on real carrier quotes

59-year-old man
Male Rates
59-year-old woman
Female Rates

At 59, term life rates are higher, but coverage is still available and can be an important part of your financial plan. The tables below show monthly premiums starting as low as $24.89/mo, covering 24 coverage amounts and five term lengths. Every rate is based on real quotes from leading life insurance carriers.

Male Rates — Age 59

Preferred Health Class

Monthly term life insurance premiums for 59-year-old males, Preferred health class
Coverage 10 Year10yr 15 Year15yr 20 Year20yr 25 Year25yr 30 Year30yr
$100K $32.91 $395/yr $42.06 $505/yr $55.66 $668/yr $91.09 $1,093/yr N/A
$200K $59.57 $715/yr $77.46 $930/yr $105.07 $1,261/yr $175.69 $2,108/yr N/A
$300K $71.20 $854/yr $93.04 $1,116/yr $122.13 $1,466/yr $235.82 $2,830/yr N/A
$400K $92.71 $1,113/yr $121.89 $1,463/yr $160.81 $1,930/yr $312.40 $3,749/yr N/A
$500K $113.45 $1,361/yr $150.95 $1,811/yr $198.06 $2,377/yr $355.64 $4,268/yr N/A
$600K $134.81 $1,618/yr $179.92 $2,159/yr $236.46 $2,838/yr $425.55 $5,107/yr N/A
$700K $156.16 $1,874/yr $208.90 $2,507/yr $274.86 $3,298/yr $495.46 $5,946/yr N/A
$800K $177.52 $2,130/yr $237.87 $2,854/yr $313.25 $3,759/yr $565.38 $6,784/yr N/A
$900K $198.88 $2,387/yr $266.84 $3,202/yr $351.65 $4,220/yr $635.29 $7,623/yr N/A
$1M $206.63 $2,480/yr $287.43 $3,449/yr $387.45 $4,649/yr $684.80 $8,218/yr N/A
$1.1M $226.63 $2,720/yr $315.54 $3,787/yr $425.56 $5,107/yr $752.67 $9,032/yr N/A
$1.2M $246.62 $2,959/yr $343.65 $4,124/yr $463.67 $5,564/yr $820.54 $9,846/yr N/A
$1.3M $266.61 $3,199/yr $371.75 $4,461/yr $501.77 $6,021/yr $888.41 $10,661/yr N/A
$1.4M $286.60 $3,439/yr $399.86 $4,798/yr $539.88 $6,479/yr $956.28 $11,475/yr N/A
$1.5M $306.65 $3,680/yr $427.97 $5,136/yr $578.14 $6,938/yr $1024.50 $12,294/yr N/A
$1.6M $326.64 $3,920/yr $456.08 $5,473/yr $616.26 $7,395/yr $1092.40 $13,109/yr N/A
$1.7M $346.63 $4,160/yr $484.18 $5,810/yr $654.37 $7,852/yr $1160.29 $13,924/yr N/A
$1.8M $366.62 $4,399/yr $512.29 $6,147/yr $692.49 $8,310/yr $1228.19 $14,738/yr N/A
$1.9M $386.61 $4,639/yr $540.40 $6,485/yr $730.61 $8,767/yr $1296.08 $15,553/yr N/A
$2M $406.60 $4,879/yr $568.50 $6,822/yr $768.72 $9,225/yr $1363.98 $16,368/yr N/A
$2.5M $503.04 $6,037/yr $708.57 $8,503/yr $959.30 $11,512/yr $1703.91 $20,447/yr N/A
$3M $602.29 $7,228/yr $849.00 $10,188/yr $1149.88 $13,799/yr $2043.48 $24,522/yr N/A
$3.5M $701.54 $8,418/yr $989.44 $11,873/yr $1340.47 $16,086/yr $2383.04 $28,597/yr N/A
$4M $800.79 $9,609/yr $1129.87 $13,558/yr $1531.05 $18,373/yr $2722.61 $32,671/yr N/A
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Standard Health Class

Monthly term life insurance premiums for 59-year-old males, Standard health class
Coverage 10 Year10yr 15 Year15yr 20 Year20yr 25 Year25yr 30 Year30yr
$100K $46.70 $560/yr $61.88 $743/yr $78.71 $945/yr $102.82 $1,234/yr N/A
$200K $86.52 $1,038/yr $115.61 $1,387/yr $151.06 $1,813/yr $198.98 $2,388/yr N/A
$300K $108.93 $1,307/yr $138.77 $1,665/yr $192.16 $2,306/yr $286.97 $3,444/yr N/A
$400K $142.95 $1,715/yr $183.00 $2,196/yr $254.18 $3,050/yr $380.55 $4,567/yr N/A
$500K $171.14 $2,054/yr $225.67 $2,708/yr $315.82 $3,790/yr $466.82 $5,602/yr N/A
$600K $204.15 $2,450/yr $269.59 $3,235/yr $377.77 $4,533/yr $558.96 $6,708/yr N/A
$700K $237.16 $2,846/yr $313.51 $3,762/yr $439.71 $5,277/yr $651.11 $7,813/yr N/A
$800K $270.17 $3,242/yr $357.43 $4,289/yr $501.66 $6,020/yr $743.26 $8,919/yr N/A
$900K $303.18 $3,638/yr $401.34 $4,816/yr $563.61 $6,763/yr $835.40 $10,025/yr N/A
$1M $325.04 $3,900/yr $432.58 $5,191/yr $616.53 $7,398/yr $917.74 $11,013/yr N/A
$1.1M $356.12 $4,273/yr $475.16 $5,702/yr $677.54 $8,131/yr $1008.90 $12,107/yr N/A
$1.2M $387.94 $4,655/yr $517.74 $6,213/yr $738.56 $8,863/yr $1100.07 $13,201/yr N/A
$1.3M $419.76 $5,037/yr $560.31 $6,724/yr $799.57 $9,595/yr $1191.23 $14,295/yr N/A
$1.4M $451.58 $5,419/yr $602.89 $7,235/yr $860.58 $10,327/yr $1282.40 $15,389/yr N/A
$1.5M $483.65 $5,804/yr $645.72 $7,749/yr $921.75 $11,061/yr $1373.91 $16,487/yr N/A
$1.6M $515.48 $6,186/yr $688.31 $8,260/yr $982.77 $11,793/yr $1465.10 $17,581/yr N/A
$1.7M $547.32 $6,568/yr $730.90 $8,771/yr $1043.80 $12,526/yr $1556.29 $18,676/yr N/A
$1.8M $579.15 $6,950/yr $773.50 $9,282/yr $1104.82 $13,258/yr $1647.48 $19,770/yr N/A
$1.9M $610.99 $7,332/yr $816.09 $9,793/yr $1165.85 $13,990/yr $1738.67 $20,864/yr N/A
$2M $642.83 $7,714/yr $858.69 $10,304/yr $1226.87 $14,722/yr $1829.86 $21,958/yr N/A
$2.5M $782.61 $9,391/yr $1072.09 $12,865/yr $1532.14 $18,386/yr $2286.27 $27,435/yr N/A
$3M $937.85 $11,254/yr $1285.14 $15,422/yr $1837.29 $22,047/yr $2742.30 $32,908/yr N/A
$3.5M $1093.10 $13,117/yr $1498.20 $17,978/yr $2142.44 $25,709/yr $3198.34 $38,380/yr N/A
$4M $1248.34 $14,980/yr $1711.25 $20,535/yr $2447.59 $29,371/yr $3654.37 $43,852/yr N/A
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Standard Tobacco Health Class

Monthly term life insurance premiums for 59-year-old males, Standard Tobacco health class
Coverage 10 Year10yr 15 Year15yr 20 Year20yr 25 Year25yr 30 Year30yr
$100K $131.61 $1,579/yr $157.62 $1,891/yr $195.74 $2,349/yr N/A N/A
$200K $256.97 $3,084/yr $308.58 $3,703/yr $385.29 $4,623/yr N/A N/A
$300K $324.47 $3,894/yr $434.75 $5,217/yr $515.46 $6,186/yr N/A N/A
$400K $430.50 $5,166/yr $577.59 $6,931/yr $685.28 $8,223/yr N/A N/A
$500K $503.26 $6,039/yr $676.66 $8,120/yr $844.23 $10,131/yr N/A N/A
$600K $602.71 $7,232/yr $810.70 $9,728/yr $1011.88 $12,142/yr N/A N/A
$700K $702.16 $8,426/yr $944.75 $11,337/yr $1179.52 $14,154/yr N/A N/A
$800K $801.61 $9,619/yr $1078.80 $12,946/yr $1347.16 $16,166/yr N/A N/A
$900K $901.06 $10,813/yr $1212.85 $14,554/yr $1514.81 $18,178/yr N/A N/A
$1M $995.89 $11,951/yr $1281.65 $15,380/yr $1642.53 $19,710/yr N/A N/A
$1.1M $1094.88 $13,139/yr $1409.18 $16,910/yr $1806.19 $21,674/yr N/A N/A
$1.2M $1193.87 $14,326/yr $1536.70 $18,440/yr $1969.84 $23,638/yr N/A N/A
$1.3M $1292.86 $15,514/yr $1664.23 $19,971/yr $2133.49 $25,602/yr N/A N/A
$1.4M $1391.85 $16,702/yr $1791.75 $21,501/yr $2297.14 $27,566/yr N/A N/A
$1.5M $1491.02 $17,892/yr $1919.55 $23,035/yr $2460.98 $29,532/yr N/A N/A
$1.6M $1590.02 $19,080/yr $2047.10 $24,565/yr $2624.65 $31,496/yr N/A N/A
$1.7M $1689.02 $20,268/yr $2174.64 $26,096/yr $2788.31 $33,460/yr N/A N/A
$1.8M $1788.02 $21,456/yr $2302.18 $27,626/yr $2951.98 $35,424/yr N/A N/A
$1.9M $1887.03 $22,644/yr $2429.72 $29,157/yr $3115.64 $37,388/yr N/A N/A
$2M $1986.03 $23,832/yr $2557.27 $30,687/yr $3279.30 $39,352/yr N/A N/A
$2.5M $2481.50 $29,778/yr $3195.68 $38,348/yr $4098.09 $49,177/yr N/A N/A
$3M $2976.59 $35,719/yr $3833.53 $46,002/yr $4916.51 $58,998/yr N/A N/A
$3.5M $3471.69 $41,660/yr $4471.38 $53,657/yr $5734.92 $68,819/yr N/A N/A
$4M $3966.79 $47,601/yr $5109.23 $61,311/yr $6553.34 $78,640/yr N/A N/A
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Female Rates — Age 59

Preferred Health Class

Monthly term life insurance premiums for 59-year-old females, Preferred health class
Coverage 10 Year10yr 15 Year15yr 20 Year20yr 25 Year25yr 30 Year30yr
$100K $24.89 $299/yr $29.88 $359/yr $37.43 $449/yr $65.53 $786/yr N/A
$200K $43.39 $521/yr $52.81 $634/yr $68.40 $821/yr $124.56 $1,495/yr N/A
$300K $51.86 $622/yr $64.60 $775/yr $88.24 $1,059/yr $174.20 $2,090/yr N/A
$400K $66.92 $803/yr $83.91 $1,007/yr $115.63 $1,388/yr $230.24 $2,763/yr N/A
$500K $81.49 $978/yr $102.36 $1,228/yr $142.93 $1,715/yr $249.36 $2,992/yr N/A
$600K $96.33 $1,156/yr $121.39 $1,457/yr $170.17 $2,042/yr $298.01 $3,576/yr N/A
$700K $111.16 $1,334/yr $140.39 $1,685/yr $197.40 $2,369/yr $346.66 $4,160/yr N/A
$800K $125.98 $1,512/yr $159.40 $1,913/yr $224.63 $2,696/yr $395.32 $4,744/yr N/A
$900K $140.81 $1,690/yr $178.40 $2,141/yr $251.86 $3,022/yr $443.97 $5,328/yr N/A
$1M $150.50 $1,806/yr $197.95 $2,375/yr $273.94 $3,287/yr $463.04 $5,557/yr N/A
$1.1M $164.87 $1,978/yr $217.07 $2,605/yr $300.70 $3,608/yr $508.74 $6,105/yr N/A
$1.2M $179.24 $2,151/yr $236.18 $2,834/yr $327.46 $3,929/yr $554.43 $6,653/yr N/A
$1.3M $193.61 $2,323/yr $255.30 $3,064/yr $354.21 $4,251/yr $600.13 $7,202/yr N/A
$1.4M $207.98 $2,496/yr $274.41 $3,293/yr $380.97 $4,572/yr $645.83 $7,750/yr N/A
$1.5M $222.60 $2,671/yr $293.43 $3,521/yr $407.87 $4,894/yr $691.87 $8,302/yr N/A
$1.6M $236.99 $2,844/yr $312.54 $3,750/yr $434.63 $5,216/yr $737.59 $8,851/yr N/A
$1.7M $251.37 $3,016/yr $331.64 $3,980/yr $461.40 $5,537/yr $783.31 $9,400/yr N/A
$1.8M $265.76 $3,189/yr $350.75 $4,209/yr $488.16 $5,858/yr $829.03 $9,948/yr N/A
$1.9M $280.15 $3,362/yr $369.86 $4,438/yr $514.93 $6,179/yr $874.75 $10,497/yr N/A
$2M $294.53 $3,534/yr $388.97 $4,668/yr $541.70 $6,500/yr $920.47 $11,046/yr N/A
$2.5M $366.34 $4,396/yr $484.01 $5,808/yr $674.79 $8,097/yr $1149.53 $13,794/yr N/A
$3M $438.24 $5,259/yr $579.45 $6,953/yr $808.46 $9,702/yr $1378.22 $16,539/yr N/A
$3.5M $510.15 $6,122/yr $674.89 $8,099/yr $942.14 $11,306/yr $1606.90 $19,283/yr N/A
$4M $582.05 $6,985/yr $770.33 $9,244/yr $1075.82 $12,910/yr $1835.59 $22,027/yr N/A
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Standard Health Class

Monthly term life insurance premiums for 59-year-old females, Standard health class
Coverage 10 Year10yr 15 Year15yr 20 Year20yr 25 Year25yr 30 Year30yr
$100K $33.92 $407/yr $41.17 $494/yr $53.25 $639/yr $88.08 $1,057/yr N/A
$200K $61.14 $734/yr $75.67 $908/yr $99.83 $1,198/yr $169.80 $2,038/yr N/A
$300K $73.28 $879/yr $96.53 $1,158/yr $136.23 $1,635/yr $234.21 $2,811/yr N/A
$400K $95.49 $1,146/yr $126.56 $1,519/yr $179.33 $2,152/yr $310.25 $3,723/yr N/A
$500K $116.02 $1,392/yr $156.72 $1,881/yr $218.90 $2,627/yr $366.71 $4,401/yr N/A
$600K $137.90 $1,655/yr $186.74 $2,241/yr $261.29 $3,135/yr $438.83 $5,266/yr N/A
$700K $159.77 $1,917/yr $216.73 $2,601/yr $303.68 $3,644/yr $510.96 $6,132/yr N/A
$800K $181.64 $2,180/yr $246.71 $2,961/yr $346.07 $4,153/yr $583.08 $6,997/yr N/A
$900K $203.51 $2,442/yr $276.70 $3,320/yr $388.46 $4,662/yr $655.21 $7,863/yr N/A
$1M $221.60 $2,659/yr $296.35 $3,556/yr $413.49 $4,962/yr $676.84 $8,122/yr N/A
$1.1M $243.08 $2,917/yr $325.29 $3,903/yr $454.20 $5,450/yr $743.92 $8,927/yr N/A
$1.2M $264.56 $3,175/yr $354.23 $4,251/yr $494.91 $5,939/yr $811.00 $9,732/yr N/A
$1.3M $286.04 $3,432/yr $383.17 $4,598/yr $535.62 $6,427/yr $878.07 $10,537/yr N/A
$1.4M $307.52 $3,690/yr $412.11 $4,945/yr $576.33 $6,916/yr $945.15 $11,342/yr N/A
$1.5M $329.24 $3,951/yr $441.20 $5,294/yr $617.19 $7,406/yr $1012.57 $12,151/yr N/A
$1.6M $350.74 $4,209/yr $470.15 $5,642/yr $657.91 $7,895/yr $1079.67 $12,956/yr N/A
$1.7M $372.23 $4,467/yr $499.11 $5,989/yr $698.63 $8,384/yr $1146.77 $13,761/yr N/A
$1.8M $393.73 $4,725/yr $528.06 $6,337/yr $739.35 $8,872/yr $1213.87 $14,566/yr N/A
$1.9M $415.23 $4,983/yr $557.01 $6,684/yr $780.07 $9,361/yr $1280.97 $15,372/yr N/A
$2M $436.72 $5,241/yr $585.96 $7,031/yr $820.79 $9,849/yr $1348.07 $16,177/yr N/A
$2.5M $544.53 $6,534/yr $731.11 $8,773/yr $1024.54 $12,294/yr $1684.03 $20,208/yr N/A
$3M $652.07 $7,825/yr $874.28 $10,491/yr $1228.17 $14,738/yr $2019.62 $24,235/yr N/A
$3.5M $759.62 $9,115/yr $1018.83 $12,226/yr $1431.80 $17,182/yr $2355.21 $28,263/yr N/A
$4M $867.16 $10,406/yr $1163.39 $13,961/yr $1635.43 $19,625/yr $2690.80 $32,290/yr N/A
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Standard Tobacco Health Class

Monthly term life insurance premiums for 59-year-old females, Standard Tobacco health class
Coverage 10 Year10yr 15 Year15yr 20 Year20yr 25 Year25yr 30 Year30yr
$100K $92.64 $1,112/yr $124.02 $1,488/yr $141.65 $1,700/yr N/A N/A
$200K $178.61 $2,143/yr $241.25 $2,895/yr $277.77 $3,333/yr N/A N/A
$300K $237.96 $2,856/yr $308.05 $3,697/yr $355.87 $4,270/yr N/A N/A
$400K $315.14 $3,782/yr $408.60 $4,903/yr $472.49 $5,670/yr N/A N/A
$500K $353.29 $4,239/yr $453.71 $5,444/yr $583.40 $7,001/yr N/A N/A
$600K $422.59 $5,071/yr $543.16 $6,518/yr $698.88 $8,386/yr N/A N/A
$700K $491.89 $5,903/yr $632.62 $7,591/yr $814.35 $9,772/yr N/A N/A
$800K $561.19 $6,734/yr $722.08 $8,665/yr $929.83 $11,158/yr N/A N/A
$900K $630.49 $7,566/yr $811.54 $9,738/yr $1045.31 $12,544/yr N/A N/A
$1M $678.44 $8,141/yr $867.30 $10,408/yr $1130.89 $13,571/yr N/A N/A
$1.1M $745.69 $8,948/yr $953.39 $11,441/yr $1243.38 $14,921/yr N/A N/A
$1.2M $812.93 $9,755/yr $1039.48 $12,474/yr $1355.87 $16,270/yr N/A N/A
$1.3M $880.17 $10,562/yr $1125.57 $13,507/yr $1468.36 $17,620/yr N/A N/A
$1.4M $947.42 $11,369/yr $1211.66 $14,540/yr $1580.85 $18,970/yr N/A N/A
$1.5M $1014.85 $12,178/yr $1298.03 $15,576/yr $1693.52 $20,322/yr N/A N/A
$1.6M $1082.10 $12,985/yr $1384.14 $16,610/yr $1806.02 $21,672/yr N/A N/A
$1.7M $1149.36 $13,792/yr $1470.25 $17,643/yr $1918.52 $23,022/yr N/A N/A
$1.8M $1216.62 $14,599/yr $1556.36 $18,676/yr $2031.02 $24,372/yr N/A N/A
$1.9M $1283.87 $15,406/yr $1642.46 $19,710/yr $2143.53 $25,722/yr N/A N/A
$2M $1351.13 $16,214/yr $1728.57 $20,743/yr $2256.03 $27,072/yr N/A N/A
$2.5M $1687.87 $20,254/yr $2159.80 $25,918/yr $2819.00 $33,828/yr N/A N/A
$3M $2024.24 $24,291/yr $2590.48 $31,086/yr $3381.59 $40,579/yr N/A N/A
$3.5M $2360.61 $28,327/yr $3021.16 $36,254/yr $3944.19 $47,330/yr N/A N/A
$4M $2696.98 $32,364/yr $3451.84 $41,422/yr $4506.79 $54,081/yr N/A N/A
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How These Rates Are Calculated

We quote every combination of age, gender, coverage amount, term length, and health class across multiple A-rated life insurance carriers. Each rate you see is the average of the 2–3 lowest quotes—a realistic picture of what a healthy applicant is likely to pay. These rates are for Texas residents.

These rates are for illustrative and research purposes. Your actual rate will depend on full underwriting. Get a personalized quote →

Rates researched and maintained by Matt Gratt, licensed life insurance agent (NPN #21590619). About CoverSavvy

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should a 59-year-old pay for life insurance?

It depends on how much coverage you want, the term length, and your health. A realistic benchmark at 59: about $121.89/mo for a healthy man or $83.91/mo for a healthy woman buys $400,000 of 15-year coverage at preferred (best) rates. Less coverage or a shorter term costs less; the tables on this page show every combination for your age.

How much is a $500,000 life insurance policy for a 59-year-old man?

At 59, a healthy non-smoking man pays about $150.95/mo for a $500,000 15-year term policy at the best (preferred) rates, or about $225.67/mo at standard rates. A 20-year term runs about $198.06/mo; a shorter term costs less. Smoking is the biggest swing — the same policy is about $676.66/mo at smoker rates. See the table on this page for every coverage and term at 59.

How much does a $1,000,000 life insurance policy cost per month at age 59?

At 59, a $1,000,000 15-year term policy costs about $287.43/mo for a healthy non-smoking man and about $197.95/mo for a healthy non-smoking woman, at preferred rates. Carriers will issue $1M of term at 59 when your income supports it — underwriting at this age generally allows up to about 20× annual income, so roughly $50,000+ of annual income justifies it. A shorter term costs less, a longer term more.

How much more does a smoker pay for life insurance at age 59?

A lot — often two to three times the non-smoking rate, though the gap narrows at older ages. At 59, $400,000 of 15-year coverage runs about $183.00/mo at a standard non-smoking rate versus about $577.59/mo at smoker rates — roughly 3.2× more. Carriers treat smoking as one of the single biggest rating factors, because the mortality difference is large.

Should I get term life insurance at 59?

For most people, yes — term life is the most affordable way to cover a time-bound need, such as a mortgage, a business loan, or income for the people who depend on you: at 59, about $121.89/mo for a healthy man or $83.91/mo for a healthy woman covers $400,000 on a 15-year term. You're buying coverage for a set period rather than forever, which fits a need that has an end date. If your need is lifelong — final expenses or estate planning — permanent insurance is the better fit.

What diseases disqualify you from term life insurance?

Many things can disqualify you from life insurance, including drug use, lack of income, medical issues, multiple DUIs, and more. The diseases that can lead to an outright decline are the ones with high near-term mortality: active or recently-treated cancer, advanced heart disease (a recent heart attack, moderate-to-severe cardiomyopathy, or coronary artery disease with complications), a recent stroke or any stroke under age 50, cirrhosis, COPD that requires oxygen, kidney failure on dialysis, HIV, an organ transplant, diabetes with significant complications, and dementia. Most chronic conditions that are diagnosed and managed — type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, asthma, a past cancer in remission, hepatitis C, thyroid conditions — do not disqualify you; carriers underwrite them every day.

Can you get life insurance on blood pressure medication?

Yes — and it may not even raise your rate. Underwriters care whether your blood pressure is controlled, not whether you take medication to control it. Treated, well-controlled blood pressure is one of the situations carriers specifically allow into their best rate classes: as a rule of thumb, average readings under about 135/85 can reach preferred rates.

Can you be denied life insurance for high blood pressure?

Yes, if it's extremely high or uncontrolled. Controlled high blood pressure — even if it takes one or more medications — is one of the conditions carriers actively welcome, often at preferred rates. Underwriters look at your average readings over the past two years; well-managed numbers (broadly, under the mid-150s/90s) are accepted, and under 140/90 can still earn preferred pricing. A denial for blood pressure alone happens when readings are high and not under control, which signals untreated cardiovascular risk.

Does sleep apnea affect life insurance rates?

Usually not too much — as long as it's treated and you're using your CPAP or other treatment. Mild to moderate sleep apnea that's managed (for example with a CPAP) and shows good compliance can still qualify for a carrier's better rate classes, sometimes even preferred. Sleep apnea only becomes a problem when it's severe AND untreated, which can lead to a decline. So the single most useful thing you can do for your rate is be on treatment and use it consistently.

Can you get life insurance after a heart attack?

Yes, after a waiting period. Most carriers postpone an application for about six months following a heart attack, then will consider you once you've recovered and your cardiologist has documented stable follow-up. The rate depends on the details — your age at the event, heart function, and how well any underlying coronary disease is managed — and usually lands in a 'rated' class rather than preferred. Coronary artery disease is one of the impairments carriers work to place rather than decline. A heart attack within the last six months is the main scenario that's temporarily off the table.

Can you be denied life insurance for diabetes?

Rarely. Type 2 diabetes is one of the conditions carriers are most experienced at insuring. A decline generally happens only when diabetes comes with significant complications (kidney, eye, or nerve damage, or related heart disease) or when blood sugar is very poorly controlled. Well-controlled diabetes — especially adult-onset — can qualify for standard or even better-than-standard rates. So the diagnosis itself doesn't deny you; uncontrolled diabetes with complications does.

Is it hard to get life insurance if you're overweight?

Usually not. Carriers use a height-and-weight ('build') chart, and the allowances are more generous than people expect — someone 5'10", for instance, can weigh into the 260s and still qualify for a standard rate, and into the 280s and still be insurable. Higher weights don't trigger an automatic decline; they move you to a 'rated' class that's individually priced. Build is also a spot where carriers grant a one-inch height credit to nudge you into a better class. So weight affects your rate far more often than whether you can get covered at all.

Am I still classed as a smoker if I vape?

Yes. Carriers classify a tobacco user as anyone who has used nicotine in any form in the last 12 months — and that explicitly includes vaping and e-cigarettes, right alongside cigarettes, cigars, pipes, chew, and even nicotine patches or gum. So vaping nicotine puts you in smoker rates. The main exception some carriers make is for very occasional cigar use, not vaping. Once you've been nicotine-free for 12 months, you generally qualify for non-smoking rates.

Can you get life insurance with a DUI?

Usually yes. A single DUI, especially a few years back, does not stop you from getting life insurance — though it can affect your rate class. Carriers look at how recent it was and whether there's a pattern: the top 'preferred' rates generally require no DUI in the last three to five years, while a more recent single DUI typically means standard or a 'rated' class. Multiple DUIs, or a recent one combined with other violations, are what cause real problems. As the event ages and your record stays clean, your options improve.

What life insurance options are available at 59?

Term life insurance is still available at 59, though the range of term lengths narrows and premiums are significantly higher than in earlier decades. Most carriers offer 10- and 15-year terms; 20-year terms are available from some carriers; 25- and 30-year terms are rare or unavailable. For most 59-year-olds, a standard term policy through full underwriting still offers the best value per dollar of coverage.

Do I need life insurance if I’m retiring soon?

Not necessarily—but many people at 59 still have financial exposure. Ask yourself: does your spouse rely on your income or pension? Is your mortgage paid off? Would your death create a financial hardship for anyone? If the answer to any of these is yes, coverage for the next 10–15 years can provide peace of mind and financial security for the people who depend on you.

Can I qualify for good rates with health issues?

You may not qualify for Preferred class, but Standard rates are designed for people with common age-related conditions. Controlled high blood pressure, managed cholesterol, mild diabetes, and a history of certain treatments are all underwritable. The key word is “controlled”—insurers look for a track record of treatment and stability. Your rates will be higher than Preferred, but coverage is very much available.

Is a 10-year term the smartest choice at 59?

For many people at 59, yes. A 10-year term covers you through age 69, which is enough time to bridge the gap to retirement, pay down a mortgage, or cover a spouse until their own retirement benefits kick in. It’s also the most affordable option—longer terms at this age carry steep premiums. That said, if you have obligations that extend further, a 15- or 20-year term may be worth the extra cost.

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