Decreasing term vs level term life insurance

Both pay your family a tax free lump sum if you die within a set term. The difference is the payout. Decreasing term shrinks over time and is the cheaper option, which suits a repayment mortgage. Level term stays the same the whole way through and costs more, which suits a family or a debt that does not fall.

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Excellent Trustpilot
£17
Average decreasing term cover a month1
£25
Average level term cover a month1
72%
Of buyers choose level term cover2
97.9%
Of protection claims paid, every year for a decade3
Both pay only if you die in the term
Decreasing shrinks, level stays flat
Decreasing is the cheaper option
Match it to the debt you are covering

The short answer

Decreasing term and level term are two kinds of the same thing, term life insurance, which pays out only if you die within a set number of years. They differ in one way that matters, what happens to the payout over time.

Decreasing term starts at a set amount and falls each year, roughly following a repayment mortgage down. It is the cheaper choice. Level term keeps the same payout from start to finish, so it suits a family who need a fixed sum or a debt that does not reduce. You pay more for that certainty.

How each one works

Both are types of term life insurance, which pays a tax free lump sum only if you die within a set number of years. Unlike whole of life cover, which always pays out one day, a term policy pays nothing if you outlive it. Both usually include terminal illness cover and have premiums that stay fixed for the whole term.

The single difference is the payout. Decreasing term starts at a chosen amount and reduces each year, roughly in step with a repayment mortgage balance. Because the insurer is on the hook for less as time goes on, it is the cheaper option, and it is often sold as mortgage life insurance. Level term keeps the same payout from the first day to the last, so whenever you die within the term, your family receives the full amount.

Worked example

Take 200,000 pounds of cover over 25 years. With level term, your family receives the full 200,000 pounds whether you die in year 2 or year 24. With decreasing term, they might receive about 195,000 pounds in year 2, but only around 10,000 pounds in year 24, because by then the mortgage it was tracking is almost cleared.

The cost difference

For the same starting amount, decreasing term is cheaper, because the amount at risk falls each year. Recent averages put decreasing term at about 17 pounds a month and level term at about 25 pounds a month for 200,000 pounds of cover.1 Across the market, decreasing cover is typically 30 to 50 percent cheaper than level for the same starting sum.4 The averages above bear that out: at about 17 pounds against 25 pounds, decreasing comes in roughly a third less.1

One nuance is worth knowing. Comparison site data shows that the median price people actually pay for the two is closer than the like for like gap suggests, because buyers tend to choose different amounts and terms for each.2 So always compare the same cover, over the same term, to see the true difference. Our guide to how much life insurance costs goes into the detail.

Despite costing more, level term is the more popular choice. Around 72 percent of life insurance sales through one large comparison site were level term policies.2 The reason is simple. Many people want cover that protects more than a shrinking mortgage, such as their family’s living costs, and they value a payout that never goes down.

When decreasing term fits best

Decreasing term is the natural fit when the thing you are protecting gets smaller over time. That mainly means a repayment mortgage, also called a capital and interest mortgage, where you chip away at the balance every month. As the debt falls, so does the cover you need, and decreasing term follows it down at a lower cost.

It also suits any other loan that reduces over time. If your main goal is simply to make sure a shrinking debt is cleared if you die, decreasing term does that job for the least money.

When level term fits best

Level term is the better fit when the need stays the same or could grow. Common examples are an interest only mortgage, where the balance never reduces, and family protection, where you want a fixed sum to replace income, cover childcare and living costs, or leave a set amount behind.

The payout holds its cash value for the whole term, which is the certainty people pay extra for. The one thing to keep in mind is inflation. A fixed 200,000 pounds is worth less in real terms after 25 years, so think about whether the amount will still be enough later on.

The differences side by side

 Decreasing termLevel term
Payout over timeFalls each yearStays the same
Typical costLowerHigher
Best forRepayment mortgage, reducing debtsInterest only mortgage, family protection
PremiumsFixed for the termFixed for the term
Terminal illness coverUsually includedUsually included
If you outlive the termPays nothingPays nothing

See decreasing and level term side by side, with your own price

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Paul Gillooly, Founder of Surely

“People fixate on which is cheaper, but that is the wrong question. The right one is what you are protecting. A repayment mortgage shrinks, so decreasing cover that shrinks with it is a neat, cheap fit. A family who would still need income in 20 years does not shrink, so level cover earns its higher price. Buy the shape that matches the need, then find the cheapest version of that.”

Paul Gillooly
Founder, Surely

Can you have both

Yes, and many people do. A common setup is decreasing term to cover the mortgage, plus a separate level term policy for the family’s wider needs, such as replacing income and covering everyday costs. There is no limit, so you can hold more than one policy at the same time. Both types also let you add critical illness cover if you want a payout on a serious diagnosis as well as on death.

A couple of things to watch

  • Decreasing cover may fall faster than your mortgage. Insurers usually set the rate of decrease using an assumed interest rate of around 8 to 10 percent. If your mortgage rate is lower, the cover can drop a little faster than the balance, so check it would still clear the debt.
  • Level cover loses value to inflation. The cash amount stays the same, but what it can buy slowly falls over a long term. Some insurers offer increasing cover that rises with inflation, for a higher premium.
  • Cheaper is not always better value. The right test is whether the shape of the cover matches the need, not the headline price.

Common questions

Is decreasing or level term cheaper?

Decreasing term is cheaper for the same starting amount, often by 30 to 50 percent, because the payout and the insurer’s risk fall each year. Level term costs more because the payout never reduces.

Which is better for a mortgage?

It depends on the mortgage. Decreasing term suits a repayment mortgage, where the balance falls. Level term suits an interest only mortgage, where the balance stays the same until the end.

Does decreasing term track my exact mortgage balance?

Only roughly. The cover reduces at a fixed rate set by the insurer, usually based on an interest rate of around 8 to 10 percent, not your actual mortgage. It is worth checking the cover would still clear the balance.

Can I have both a decreasing and a level policy?

Yes. A common approach is decreasing term for the mortgage and a separate level term policy for family income and living costs. There is no limit on the number of policies you can hold.

Do both pay out if I outlive the term?

No. Both are term policies, so if you are still alive when the term ends, neither pays anything and the cover simply stops.

Which type is more popular?

Level term. Around 72 percent of life insurance sales through one large comparison site were level term, as many people want cover that protects more than just a shrinking mortgage.

Decreasing and level term in numbers

A summary of the figures behind this guide.

The picture in numbersFigure
Average decreasing term cover£16.58 a month
Average level term cover£25.05 a month
How much cheaper decreasing is, like for likeAround 30 to 50%
Share of buyers choosing level termAbout 72%
Protection claims paid97.9% or more for a decade
Payout if you outlive the termNothing, for both

Surely analysis of the myTribe 2026 pricing survey, MoneySuperMarket life insurance statistics and ABI protection claims data.123

Deciding what is right for you

Do not start with the price. Start with what you are protecting. If it is a repayment mortgage or another debt that falls over time, decreasing term covers it for less. If it is a family, an interest only mortgage or a fixed sum you want to leave, level term holds its value and is worth the extra. Many people use both. Whichever you choose, compare the same cover across insurers to find the best price.

Found the type that fits? Compare quotes in a few minutes

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Cover, price and eligibility depend on your personal circumstances, including your age, health, occupation and smoker status, and on insurer terms. Surely is operated by PJG Financial Ltd, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, FRN 919697.

How we researched this guide

We write our guides from named, public UK sources and cross check the figures rather than rely on a single site. Where we say “Surely analysis”, it means we have compiled and compared published data, not produced the raw figures ourselves.

The data on this page draws on:

  • myTribe Life Insurance Pricing Survey 2026, for average monthly premiums by cover type.
  • MoneySuperMarket life insurance statistics, May 2026, for the share of buyers choosing level term and the price comparison.
  • Association of British Insurers and GRiD protection claims data 2024, for the proportion of claims paid.
  • Published market guidance from UK insurers and brokers, for the typical cost gap and the way decreasing cover is set.

Cost figures are illustrative averages, not quotes. Your own price will depend on your age, health, the cover you choose and the insurer.

Surely compares cover from a selected panel of UK insurers and protection providers, not the whole of the market. Surely may receive a commission from the provider you take out cover with, which does not affect the price you pay.

Written and reviewed by Paul Gillooly, Founder of Surely. Last reviewed June 2026.

Sources

  1. myTribe Life Insurance Pricing Survey 2026. Average monthly premiums: decreasing term £16.58, level term £25.05, based on £200,000 of cover over 25 years for a healthy non smoker.
  2. MoneySuperMarket life insurance statistics, May 2026. Around 72% of life insurance sales were level term; the median price paid for decreasing term was similar to level term. moneysupermarket.com
  3. Association of British Insurers and GRiD, protection claims data 2024, published July 2025. The proportion of new individual claims paid has remained at or above 97.9% over the past decade. abi.org.uk
  4. Published market guidance from UK insurers and brokers, 2026. Decreasing term is typically 30 to 50% cheaper than level term for the same starting cover.
Page Author Paul Gillooly Founder at Surely

Paul is a UK financial expert with 15 years’ experience in financial services and financial advice. He creates clear, practical content to help people understand and compare life insurance. View Full Bio

Last Updated 26 Jun, 2026

We regularly review and update our content.

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