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Cost & Coverage

Final Expense Insurance Rates by Age in Florida: Sample Premiums at 55, 60, 65, 70, 75, 80

Ali Taqi, Licensed Florida Insurance Agent
By Ali Taqi · Licensed FL Agent #W393613
Published · Last reviewed

Final expense insurance premiums roughly double between age 55 and age 70 and rise sharply again after 75 — for a healthy Florida non-smoker, a $15,000 simplified-issue whole-life policy illustrates around $42–54/month at 55, around $62–81/month at 65, and around $107–146/month at 75, with women paying meaningfully less than men at every age. Those are carrier-calculator-based examples (interpolated to the $15,000 amount from published $10,000 and $25,000 rates), not your quote. The single most important thing to understand before you read another rate chart online is this: final expense rates are individually underwritten and permanently locked at your age on the day you apply, so the only number that matters is the one a carrier returns for your specific age, sex, tobacco status, health answers, and ZIP code. I'm Ali Taqi, an independent Florida insurance agent (license #W393613), and below I'll show you honest, sourced sample ranges by age — and then explain exactly why your real number will land where it lands.

How to Read These Rates (Please Read This First)

Every "rates by age" table on the internet — including the one below — is an illustration. It is built from one or two carriers' published calculators on a specific date for a specific applicant profile. It is genuinely useful for understanding the shape of final expense pricing: how fast rates climb with age, how much sex matters, how face amount scales. It is not a quote, and nobody can promise you the exact number until a carrier underwrites you.

Final expense (also called burial or funeral insurance) is small-face whole life — typically $5,000 to $25,000 or $35,000 — built for seniors who want to cover a funeral and final bills without a medical exam. Three things make your premium permanent and personal:

  • Your age locks the rate for life. Whole life premiums are level — your rate at 65 is your rate at 95. Waiting a year almost always costs you more, permanently.
  • Tobacco roughly doubles the price. Every range below assumes non-tobacco. Smokers, dippers, and recent quitters pay a separate, much higher rate class.
  • Health answers move you between underwriting tiers. A simplified-issue applicant who answers "no" to the knockout questions pays far less than a guaranteed-issue applicant — more on that below.

So treat the tables as a map, not a price tag. The territory is your actual quote.

Sample Final Expense Rates by Age — Female (Non-Tobacco)

The figures below are illustrative monthly premiums for a non-tobacco female on a simplified-issue/level whole-life final expense policy. The $10,000 and $25,000 columns are taken directly from Choice Mutual's published rate calculator (rates valid as of 03/09/2026); the $15,000 column is straight-line interpolated between those two published figures, because the calculator publishes $5,000 / $10,000 / $25,000 bands rather than $15,000. MoneyGeek's June 2026 multi-carrier analysis produces very similar $10,000 figures, which is a good sign the shape is representative rather than one carrier's outlier.

Age $10,000 $15,000 $25,000
55 ~$28/mo ~$42/mo ~$64/mo
60 ~$33/mo ~$50/mo ~$76/mo
65 ~$41/mo ~$62/mo ~$97/mo
70 ~$53/mo ~$80/mo ~$127/mo
75 ~$71/mo ~$107/mo ~$172/mo
80 ~$98/mo ~$147/mo ~$241/mo

Source: Choice Mutual final-expense rate calculator, non-tobacco whole life, valid 03/09/2026 ($10,000 and $25,000 columns published; $15,000 interpolated between them). Illustrative only — your rate depends on your age, sex, tobacco status, health, and carrier.

Sample Final Expense Rates by Age — Male (Non-Tobacco)

Men pay more at every age for the same coverage — typically 25–35% more — because of shorter average life expectancy. Same source, same date, same caveats.

Age $10,000 $15,000 $25,000
55 ~$36/mo ~$54/mo ~$84/mo
60 ~$43/mo ~$65/mo ~$103/mo
65 ~$54/mo ~$81/mo ~$130/mo
70 ~$70/mo ~$105/mo ~$169/mo
75 ~$97/mo ~$146/mo ~$238/mo
80 ~$135/mo ~$203/mo ~$332/mo

Source: Choice Mutual final-expense rate calculator, non-tobacco whole life, valid 03/09/2026 ($10,000 and $25,000 columns published; $15,000 interpolated between them). Illustrative only.

A few honest reads on these numbers:

  • The 55-to-70 doubling is real. A non-tobacco woman's $15,000 premium roughly grows from ~$42 to ~$80 over those 15 years. That is the single best argument for not "waiting until I need it." You never get a cheaper rate than today's.
  • The jump after 75 is the steepest stretch. Look at how $15,000 for a man moves from ~$146 at 75 to ~$203 at 80. If you are in your mid-70s and still uninsured, the cost-of-waiting math gets aggressive.
  • Face amount scales close to linearly. $25,000 is roughly 2.3–2.5× the $10,000 premium, not 2.5× plus a penalty. Buying the right amount once is cheaper than stacking small policies later at older-age rates.

Why Your Real Quote Will Differ — Get a Real Number

These tables hold the easy variables fixed (non-tobacco, "good health," a representative carrier). Your real quote moves on the variables they can't show:

  • Tobacco/nicotine use can roughly double every figure above.
  • Health conditions (diabetes with complications, COPD, recent cardiac events, certain cancers) can push you from preferred to standard to graded — or to guaranteed-issue.
  • Carrier niche matters enormously. What one A-rated carrier rates as a decline, another issues at standard. Final expense underwriting is not uniform across carriers — that is the entire reason to shop more than one.
  • Sex and exact age shift the number even within the bands above.

There is no honest way to give you a guaranteed premium from a blog post. The only accurate number is an underwritten quote. Request a free final-expense quote and I'll run your specific age and health against multiple A-rated carriers and show you the real figures in writing.

Simplified Issue vs Guaranteed Issue: The Pricing Fork

Every rate above assumes simplified-issue underwriting — you answer roughly 8 to 15 yes/no health questions, the carrier checks your prescription and MIB history, and if you clear the knockout conditions you get a level death benefit from day one at the lowest available rate. For most healthy or moderately-healthy Florida seniors, this is the right and cheapest path.

Guaranteed-issue (GIWL) asks zero health questions and cannot decline you within the eligible age band — but you pay for that certainty two ways. First, the premium is higher for the same face amount. Second, and more importantly, it carries a 2-to-3-year graded waiting period: natural-cause death in the early policy years pays back premiums plus interest (commonly around 110% of premiums paid) rather than the full face amount, with the full benefit kicking in only after the graded window. Accidental death is typically covered at full face from day one.

The practical gap is large. Industry guidance is consistent that, for the same monthly budget, simplified-issue level plans typically deliver roughly 2–5× more coverage than guaranteed-issue — because you're qualifying on health answers instead of paying pure guaranteed-acceptance risk pricing. In plain terms: the same dollars buy a lot more protection, with no waiting period, if you can answer the health questions.

That is why the honest move is almost always to try simplified-issue first and only fall back to guaranteed-issue if your health genuinely rules it out (active cancer treatment, dialysis, oxygen-dependent COPD, a recent stroke or heart attack, or a terminal diagnosis). I walk through that exact decision tree in simplified issue vs guaranteed issue, and the mechanics of the waiting period in how the graded death benefit works.

How Much Coverage Do These Premiums Need to Buy?

Rate-by-age is only half the question. The other half is how much face amount to lock at that rate. The anchor is what a Florida funeral actually costs.

The National Funeral Directors Association reports a national median of about $8,300 for a funeral with viewing and burial (NFDA's most recent General Price List Survey release, using 2023 data) — and that figure is funeral-home charges only. Once you add the cemetery plot, vault, headstone, flowers, and obituary, a traditional Florida burial commonly lands in the $9,000–$13,000 range, with Florida metros generally tracking slightly above the national median because of cemetery-plot land costs. I break the full line-item bill down in how much a funeral costs in Florida in 2026.

That is why a $15,000 face amount sits in the sweet spot for most Florida traditional funerals — it covers the funeral and leaves a cushion for unpaid medical bills, the credit-card balance, or the certified death certificates (you typically need 6–10 at $15–$25 each). If the plan is direct cremation only, a $7,500–$10,000 policy is usually plenty. If a desirable cemetery plot in Naples, Sarasota, or coastal South Florida is part of the plan, $20,000–$25,000 is the right zone.

Match that against the tables above and the monthly cost becomes concrete. A 65-year-old Florida woman locking in $15,000 of day-one coverage illustrates around $62/month; a 65-year-old man around $81/month — for a benefit that never expires, never reprices, and pays the beneficiary directly.

Three Florida-Specific Protections on Every One of These Policies

The premium buys more than a check. In Florida, a properly structured final-expense policy carries statutory protections worth knowing before you buy:

  • F.S. §222.13 generally exempts life-insurance proceeds payable to a Florida-resident beneficiary from the deceased insured's creditors — the funeral home, hospital lien, and credit-card collector cannot intercept the death benefit.
  • F.S. §222.14 generally protects the policy's cash surrender value from your own creditors while you are alive.
  • IRC §101(a) makes the death benefit federal-income-tax-free when paid as a lump sum to a named beneficiary.

One catch that erases all three: if you name "my estate" as beneficiary instead of an actual person, you can lose these protections and route the money through probate. Name a human being.

The Bottom Line on Rates by Age

The tables above are the honest shape of final expense pricing in 2026: women pay less than men, rates roughly double from 55 to 70 and climb steeply after 75, $25,000 costs about 2.3–2.5× the $10,000 premium, and tobacco changes everything. Use them to understand the trade-offs and to confirm that nobody quoting you wildly different numbers is doing you a favor. But do not buy off a chart — including mine.

I'm Ali Taqi, an independent FL-licensed agent (W393613) appointed with multiple A-rated final-expense carriers — Mutual of Omaha, Aetna/Accendo, AIG, Liberty Bankers, Royal Neighbors, and others. I will run your specific age, sex, and health questions against several carriers head-to-head and show you the actual premium in writing — simplified-issue first, guaranteed-issue only if your health requires it — not a marketing range. Request a free quote — it takes about two minutes, no pressure, no obligation — or call (239) 800-8508 to walk through your situation. Most clients are surprised they qualify for simplified-issue, and for a lower rate, than the charts led them to expect.

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