March 1, 2026
5 Mistakes People Make When Buying Whole Life Insurance
Whole life insurance gets a bad reputation online, and honestly, some of it is deserved — but not because the product is bad. It's because people buy it wrong. Here are the five mistakes I see most often.
Mistake 1: Buying Whole Life When You Can't Afford It
Whole life premiums are significantly higher than term. If paying the premium means you can't max out your 401(k), build an emergency fund, or pay off high-interest debt, then whole life isn't the right move yet. Get term life first, handle the basics, and add whole life later when your cash flow supports it.
Mistake 2: Buying From a Captive Agent
A captive agent works for one insurance company and can only sell that company's products. An independent agent (like me) compares policies from 8+ carriers. The difference in premiums and policy features can be significant. Same coverage, potentially 20-30% lower cost — just because you shopped around.
Mistake 3: Not Understanding the Cash Value Timeline
Your whole life policy doesn't build meaningful cash value in the first few years. The early premiums mostly go toward insurance costs and carrier expenses. Cash value growth typically accelerates after years 7-10. If you surrender the policy in year 3, you'll get back far less than you paid in. This is not a short-term product.
Mistake 4: Replacing an Old Policy Without Analyzing It
If someone tells you to surrender your existing whole life policy and buy a new one, be very careful. Old policies often have more favorable interest rates and lower costs than new policies. Sometimes an agent recommends replacement just to earn a new commission. Always get a second opinion before surrendering an existing whole life policy.
Mistake 5: Buying Too Much or Too Little
Whole life doesn't have to be all-or-nothing. Many of my Florida clients use a blended approach: a large term policy for income replacement needs, plus a smaller whole life policy for permanent coverage and cash value. The right mix depends on your age, income, debts, and goals.
The Bottom Line
Whole life insurance is a legitimate and valuable financial product — when it's the right fit. The key is working with an independent agent who'll tell you honestly whether it makes sense for your situation, and who'll help you structure it correctly.
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I'll tell you if whole life makes sense for you — and if it does, I'll help you avoid these mistakes.
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