LIFE INSURANCE FOR FAMILIES WITH YOUNG CHILDREN
Kelly Insurance Group helps parents of young children build life insurance programs sized to the actual financial exposure a young family faces — income replacement, mortgage payoff, childcare replacement, and college funding — for both parents, not just the primary earner.

WHERE YOUR FAMILY IS NOW DETERMINES WHAT YOUR LIFE INSURANCE PROGRAM NEEDS TO DO.
The highest-vulnerability period. Both parents should be covered. Income replacement should extend at least 20 years. The stay-at-home parent's life should be insured for childcare replacement value. Beneficiary designations must not name minor children directly — a trust or custodian is required.
School-age years. Coverage amounts should reflect current income — not income at the time of policy issue. If income has grown since the original policy was placed, a review and potential increase is warranted. Begin thinking about college funding as part of the death benefit calculation.
Approaching college. College funding is now 1 to 5 years away — the death benefit should include the estimated college cost for each child. Review term lengths to ensure coverage extends through the college years. Both parents' policies should be reviewed together.
Children approaching independence. Coverage needs shift. Income replacement still matters if a spouse depends on the income. College funding needs are resolving. Begin thinking about whether term coverage should be converted or replaced as obligations change.


HOW TO BUILD A LIFE INSURANCE PROGRAM THAT ACTUALLY PROTECTS YOUR YOUNG FAMILY.

BOTH PARENTS NEED COVERAGE — EVEN THE STAY-AT-HOME PARENT
The death of the primary earner creates an obvious income gap. The death of a stay-at-home parent creates a less visible but equally real financial crisis: full-time childcare, household management, and the surviving working parent's potential need to reduce hours or change jobs. Families with young children need both parents covered — individually, for the right amounts, based on each parent's specific role and contribution.
YOUR COVERAGE AMOUNT SHOULD REFLECT WHAT YOUR FAMILY ACTUALLY NEEDS — NOT A RULE OF THUMB
Ten times income is a shortcut that ignores your mortgage balance, your number of children, their ages, the cost of replacing childcare, and your spouse's earning capacity. A family with a $350,000 mortgage, three young children, and a stay-at-home parent has a fundamentally different coverage need than a family with a paid-off home, one older child, and a dual income. Size coverage to your actual situation.
COLLEGE FUNDING IS PART OF THE COVERAGE CALCULATION — NOT AN AFTERTHOUGHT
If you die before your children finish college, who pays for it? Your income would have funded it. Your life insurance death benefit should include the estimated college funding need — typically $50,000 to $200,000 or more per child depending on the institution. Most families calculate coverage without this component and discover a significant gap when they include it.
EXPLORE MORE FAMILY LIFE INSURANCE RESOURCES
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS.
How much life insurance does a family with young children actually need?
Add income replacement for 20 years, the current mortgage balance, outstanding debts, and estimated college funding costs for each child. For a family with two young children, a $350,000 mortgage, and a combined household income of $120,000, the total coverage need is typically $1,500,000 to $2,000,000 or more. The rule of thumb of ten times income almost always understates the actual need for young families.
Does a stay-at-home parent need life insurance?
Yes. The death of a stay-at-home parent creates immediate, substantial costs — full-time childcare, household management, and the disruption to the working parent's career. These costs can total $30,000 to $60,000 or more annually. Coverage of several hundred thousand dollars for a stay-at-home parent with young children is not excessive — it reflects the real financial impact of their death on the family.
How long should the term be for a family with young children?
A 20- to 30-year term is most appropriate for parents with young children. A 30-year term started at 30 covers the family until the youngest child is potentially through college and the mortgage may be paid off or significantly reduced. Shorter terms create a coverage gap during years when significant financial obligations remain outstanding.
Should we each have separate policies or one joint policy?
Separate individual policies on each parent are strongly preferred. A joint first-to-die policy pays at the first death and then terminates — leaving the surviving parent without coverage for the remaining years. Individual policies on each parent ensure both deaths are covered for the appropriate amount and term.
What if we can only afford one policy — whose life should be insured?
The primary earner's life insurance is typically the higher priority because the income gap is most immediate. However, the most cost-effective approach is to insure both parents — the premium difference between insuring one parent and both parents is often smaller than families expect, particularly when using term life at younger ages.
When should we review our life insurance after having children?
Immediately after the birth or adoption of each child. Each child increases the coverage need — more years of income replacement, more childcare cost exposure, and more college funding obligation. A review after each child arrives, and then every three to five years as income grows, ensures coverage keeps pace with the family's evolving financial situation.
READY TO GET STARTED?
MAKE SURE YOUR YOUNG FAMILY IS ACTUALLY PROTECTED — NOT JUST NOMINALLY COVERED.
Kelly Insurance Group helps parents of young children build life insurance programs sized to what the family actually needs — income replacement, mortgage payoff, childcare replacement, and college funding — for both parents, not just one.
The availability of coverage and eligibility for coverage can depend on numerous factors. We cannot guarantee that all customers, individuals, and businesses looking for coverage will be successful in these efforts when contacting our team. All policy coverages and terms need to be fully reviewed by the respective consumer to ensure the coverage asked for is what is specifically being quoted or provided by any insurance policy. Insurance Policies, Coverage Changes, and their terms and conditions are not bound or altered until written confirmation is provided by one of our licensed team members or underwriters. This page does not offer legal advice, legal opinions, or policy interpretations. Rather, this page is meant as a resource to help provide customers and insurance consumers with additional considerations that may help in their insurance buying or pursuit of insurance information. Kelly Insurance Group does not employ or direct attorneys.
FIND RELATED COVERAGE FAST
LOADING LIVE SITEMAP...
Disclaimer: Coverage availability and eligibility may depend on many factors, including underwriting review, carrier guidelines, policy terms, state requirements, business operations, risk characteristics, and other information provided during the application or quoting process. Kelly Insurance Group cannot guarantee that every individual, customer, organization, or business seeking coverage will qualify for, receive, or successfully place insurance coverage. All policy coverages, exclusions, conditions, limits, endorsements, and terms should be carefully reviewed by the consumer, insured, or applicant to confirm that the coverage requested is the coverage being quoted, offered, or provided. Insurance coverage, policy changes, endorsements, cancellations, and other policy terms are not bound, changed, confirmed, or altered unless and until written confirmation is provided by a licensed Kelly Insurance Group team member, the applicable insurance carrier, or an authorized underwriter. This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not provide legal advice, legal opinions, insurance coverage opinions, or policy interpretations. Information on this page should not be relied upon as a substitute for reviewing the actual policy language or consulting appropriate professional advisors. Kelly Insurance Group does not employ, supervise, or direct attorneys.