Here’s something I’ve noticed: the loudest voices arguing against life insurance after financial independence almost always come from people who aren’t financially independent yet. They’re still grinding toward FIRE, optimizing every dollar, cutting costs to close the gap. Makes sense for them. But once you actually get there, the calculus changes.
Every single person I know in real life who is FIRE, or has a net worth over $10 million, has life insurance. Not just life insurance either. They have car insurance, property insurance, personal property insurance, and an umbrella policy. The wealthier people get, the more they insure. That’s not a coincidence.
For context: my wife and I have matching 20-year term policies we got through Policygenius that we plan to hold for the full term. Policygenius lets you shop for customized, affordable life insurance in one place.
Your Mindset Shifts From Accumulation To Preservation
Once you reach financial independence, something fundamental changes. You stop chasing more and start protecting what you have. FIRE, by definition, means you’ve traded maximum earning potential for maximum freedom. If you still wanted more money, you’d keep grinding. But you don’t, so you negotiated a severance, walked out, and never looked back.
In FIRE mode, you optimize for peace of mind and stability. An extra $100,000 or even $1 million doesn’t move the needle on your lifestyle because you’re already free. Suddenly, earning a risk-free 4.5% on your cash looks pretty attractive when your safe withdrawal rate is 3.5%. You buy more Treasury bonds, less stock, and sleep better.
You also stop sweating small conveniences. You pay a little more for the closer gas station. You get food delivery. You pay for help around the house, tutoring for the kids, a revocable living trust, a death file. The older and wealthier you get, the more you’re willing to pay for stability and peace of mind.
Life insurance is exactly that kind of purchase.
A Premature Death Is The Most Destabilizing Event Imaginable
The opposite of stability and financial peace is watching your family scramble after you die.
If you’re the primary or sole financial provider, dying without life insurance leaves a quiet, devastating uncertainty for your survivors. The last thing you want is your grieving spouse selling assets at the worst possible moment because panic set in.
Think about dying during the 2008 financial crisis, or during the COVID crash in March 2020. Your family is already overwhelmed with grief. Then they watch the portfolio drop 30%, and the fear compounds: “I already lost him. I’d better sell before I lose everything too.” Nobody thinks clearly in that state. The Pacific Palisades fires in early 2025 reminded us all that catastrophic loss can stack on top of catastrophic loss without warning.
Life insurance provides a tax-free financial buffer so the surviving family can keep living normally without touching a single investment. The bigger the policy, the longer they can breathe before making any decisions.
Don’t Touch The Finances For At Least A Year
Just like you should sit on a financial windfall for a few months before doing anything with it, surviving family members shouldn’t make major financial decisions for at least a year after a loss. The worst of the grief will have softened enough by then for rational thinking to return. But sadly, the pain will never fully go away.
With that in mind, a good baseline for your life insurance amount is at least one year of living expenses. I’d recommend two years, since settling an estate and managing a trust can easily drag past the 12-month mark.
My wife and I have matching 20-year policies that cover about 2.8 years of our normal living expenses. We chose that number deliberately. Between any market correction timing and the time needed to actually access and execute our trust documents, 2.8 years felt like the right cushion to come out the other side financially intact.
Life Insurance Calculator For Those Who Are FIRE
Your situation
Annual living expenses
$100,000
Kids’ life stage
Recommended coverage
Years of expenses to cover
5
range: 4–6 years
Minimum coverage
$400,000
low end of range
Recommended coverage
$500,000
midpoint of range
Maximum coverage
$600,000
high end of range
Coverage by life stage
Newly FIRE
Young kids (under 10)
Most critical window. Longest runway needed for surviving spouse.
$500,000
4–6 years of expenses
Middle growth
Kids in middle / high school
Still important. Kids not yet independent. Buffer needed.
$350,000
3–4 years of expenses
Final stretch
Kids in college
Nearing the finish line. Minimum buffer to avoid panic selling.
$250,000
2–3 years of expenses
✓ When to drop life insurance
Cancel your policy when all three conditions are met: your kids are financially independent, your surviving spouse’s passive income alone covers all living expenses, and your net worth is large enough that the payout is irrelevant relative to the estate. Until then, keep it.
Estimates based on Financial Samurai’s framework. Each household is different. Use these as a starting point, not a final answer. Consider getting free customized quotes at Policygenius.
The Cost Is Almost Irrelevant At This Point
Here’s what’s funny about life insurance after FIRE: it’s cheap relative to your wealth, but most people still don’t get it.
Our policies cost $200/month combined. That covers 2.8 years of living expenses. If I’d been smart and locked in a 30-year policy at age 30, it would have cost $40/month. Instead, I spent two years paying $760 to $880 a month on an old policy I thought ended. Instead, my old insurance provider was automatically debiting my checking account each month without me noticing.
That’s probably my second biggest financial mistake ever, and I’ve made some good ones.
But here’s the point: even at the inflated price, life insurance didn’t hurt. When you’re financially independent, the premiums are a rounding error in your budget. And the relief that came when we locked in our Policygenius policies in 2022 was immediate and real.
Knowing my wife and kids wouldn’t have to sell a single asset for nearly three years if I died tomorrow is worth at least $1,000 a month in peace of mind to me. I’m paying $140. That’s $860 a month in value I’m essentially getting for free. I’m not sure paying $1,000 a month for a therapist could provide this type of mental relief.
Lock Down A Life Insurance Policy
Life insurance after FIRE isn’t a contradiction. It’s the move every wealthy, financially savvy person I know has made. It’s not about needing the money. It’s about buying your family time, stability, and the space to grieve without financial panic layered on top.
That’s not a cost. That’s an act of love.
If your passive income and wealth eventually grow large enough, and your kids are grown and financially independent, feel free to cancel. But until then, treasure the security it provides. The premiums are cheap. The peace of mind is not.
Readers, are you financially independent but still holding a life insurance policy? Do you think people still on the path to FIRE are so laser-focused on cutting costs that they miss the intangible benefits? How are you protecting your family from a premature death? What are some other benefits of having life insurance after FIRE?
To achieve financial freedom sooner, join 60,000 others and sign up for my free weekly newsletter. This way, you’ll never miss a thing.


