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Family relaxing on couch together, representing the equal importance of both spouses in household life and the need for coordinated life insurance
Family & Life Stages Ali Taqi

Life Insurance for Couples: How to Coordinate Coverage

When it comes to life insurance, many couples make the mistake of only covering the higher-earning spouse. But both partners contribute to the household — financially and otherwise — and both need protection.

Parents enjoying quality time with toddlers at home, illustrating the shared family responsibilities that require coordinated life insurance coverage

Why Both Spouses Need Coverage

Even if one spouse earns significantly more than the other, the death of either partner creates a financial impact. If the lower-earning or non-working spouse dies, the surviving spouse faces new expenses: childcare, housekeeping, transportation, and the emotional burden of managing everything alone while grieving. These costs add up quickly and can strain even a healthy income.

The working spouse's coverage should replace their income for 10 to 15 years and cover outstanding debts. The non-working or lower-earning spouse's coverage should cover the cost of replacing the services they provide — childcare alone can cost $15,000 to $25,000 per year in Florida.

Individual vs Joint Policies

Couples can buy individual policies (one for each person) or a joint policy (one policy covering both). Individual policies are almost always the better choice. With individual policies, when one spouse dies, the other keeps their own coverage. With a joint first-to-die policy, the policy pays out when the first spouse dies and the surviving spouse is left without coverage — potentially at an age or health status that makes buying a new policy expensive.

Coordinating Coverage Amounts

Each spouse's coverage should reflect the financial impact of their death, not just match the other's policy. Consider each person's income, debts they're responsible for, childcare responsibilities, and future financial obligations like college funding. It's common for one spouse to need $1 million in coverage while the other needs $500,000 — and that's perfectly fine.

Same-Sex Couples

Same-sex married couples have the same life insurance options and rights as any other married couple in Florida. Beneficiary designations, policy ownership, and tax treatment all work identically. If you're in a domestic partnership that isn't legally recognized as marriage, you can still name your partner as beneficiary — there's no legal requirement that your beneficiary be a spouse or family member.

Review Together Regularly

Make life insurance review part of your annual financial check-up as a couple. Life changes — new children, career changes, home purchases, inheritance — can all affect how much coverage each of you needs. Reviewing together ensures you're both protected and that your policies still make sense for your current situation.

Life insurance works best when both partners are covered and the coverage is coordinated. Think of it as a team strategy — each person's policy protects the other and the family as a whole.

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