LIFE INSURANCE FOR NEW PARENTS
Kelly Insurance Group helps new parents understand and act on the life insurance changes a new baby requires — updated coverage amounts, beneficiary designations for a minor child, guardian designation, and coverage for both parents — as quickly as possible after a birth or adoption.

THE SIX LIFE INSURANCE STEPS EVERY NEW PARENT SHOULD TAKE IN THE FIRST YEAR.
Review both parents' existing life insurance coverage amounts. A new dependent changes the calculation fundamentally — coverage that was adequate before the baby is almost certainly insufficient after. If you do not yet have individual life insurance, this is the moment to apply. Premiums will never be lower than they are right now.
Do not name the newborn as a direct beneficiary — insurance companies cannot pay death benefits directly to minors. Name a trust as beneficiary with distribution instructions, or a custodian under the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act. Also update all retirement account beneficiary designations, which are separate from life insurance designations.
A will that names a guardian for your child is the legal document that controls who raises your child if both parents die. Without a guardian designation, a court makes that decision. Execute or update your will as soon as possible after the birth — this is one of the most time-sensitive estate planning steps for new parents.
A new baby adds at minimum 22 years of income replacement need, estimated childcare costs, and college funding — typically $50,000 to $150,000 or more — to the coverage calculation. Run the numbers fresh for both parents with the new dependent included. Most new parents discover a significant gap between existing coverage and what the family now actually needs.
If you have group life through your employer, update the beneficiary designation. Also confirm the coverage amount — one to two times salary is the typical group life benefit. For a new parent with a $300,000 mortgage and an 18-year income replacement need, employer group life is a starting point, not a complete solution.
If one parent is staying home, their life needs to be insured too. Full-time childcare replacement, household management, and the working parent's potential income reduction if they need to change schedules represent real financial costs that require their own coverage.


HOW A NEW BABY CHANGES YOUR LIFE INSURANCE SITUATION — AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT.

A BABY CREATES AN IMMEDIATE 20-PLUS YEAR FINANCIAL OBLIGATION
The moment a child is born or adopted, both parents take on a financial commitment that extends two decades or more. Income replacement, childcare, housing, healthcare, education — your child depends on you for all of it. Life insurance converts that dependency from a financial risk into a solved problem. The time to solve it is now, while you are young, healthy, and premiums are at their lowest.
BOTH PARENTS NEED COVERAGE — STARTING WITH THE BIRTH
Many new parents apply for coverage on the primary earner and defer the stay-at-home or lower-earning parent's coverage for later. Later rarely comes, and when it does, premiums are higher and health may have changed. Both parents' lives carry financial value to the household — both should be insured as soon as possible after the baby arrives.
THE GUARDIAN DESIGNATION AND THE DEATH BENEFIT WORK TOGETHER
Your will designates who raises your children. Your life insurance funds that raising. A guardian without a death benefit is an obligation without resources. A death benefit without a guardian designation is money without direction. New parents need both — a will with a guardian designation and life insurance sized to support the guardian and the children through independence.
EXPLORE MORE FAMILY LIFE INSURANCE RESOURCES
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS.
How much additional life insurance do I need after having a baby?
Calculate fresh: add 20 or more years of income replacement, the full cost of childcare replacement for both parents if applicable, the outstanding mortgage balance, college funding per child, and any other outstanding debt. For most families with a new baby, the total coverage need is $1,000,000 to $2,000,000 or more — significantly more than the one to two times salary typically provided by employer group life.
Can I name my newborn as a life insurance beneficiary?
Technically yes — but it creates a significant problem. Insurance companies cannot pay death benefits directly to a minor. The proceeds will be held under court supervision until the child reaches legal age, with a court-appointed custodian controlling how the funds are managed. Name a trust with distribution instructions, or a Uniform Transfers to Minors Act custodian, rather than naming the child directly.
Should I buy term or whole life insurance as a new parent?
For most new parents, term life insurance provides the most coverage for the most critical years at the lowest cost. A 20- or 30-year term policy covers the period when children are dependent and the mortgage is outstanding — the years when coverage is most important. Whole life may have a role for permanent estate planning needs, but term is the right foundation for most young families' income replacement need.
When should I apply for life insurance after a new baby?
As soon as possible — ideally within the first few weeks. There is no waiting period requirement, and every month of delay is a month the family is without adequate coverage. The birth of a child is one of the clearest life insurance triggers that exists. Do not put it on the to-do list for next quarter.
What if one parent is staying home — do they need life insurance?
Yes. A stay-at-home parent's death creates immediate, substantial costs — full-time childcare, household management, and the working parent's potential need to reduce hours. Coverage of several hundred thousand dollars is appropriate for a stay-at-home parent with a newborn. The coverage amount should reflect the cost of replacing the services provided, not the salary earned.
How do I establish a guardian for my child through life insurance and estate planning?
Life insurance provides the money; your will designates the person. A will with a guardian designation names who cares for your child if both parents die. The life insurance death benefit — paid to a trust or custodian for the child — funds that caregiving. Both documents must be in place. An estate planning attorney can help establish the trust structure and coordinate both documents.
READY TO GET STARTED?
YOU JUST BECAME RESPONSIBLE FOR SOMEONE ELSE'S ENTIRE FUTURE. GET COVERED NOW.
Kelly Insurance Group helps new parents get life insurance in place quickly — coverage for both parents, beneficiary designations structured for a minor child, and a program sized to what a new family actually needs, not what a rule of thumb suggests.
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.
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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.