Whole Of Life Insurance

Cover with no end date that pays out whenever you die, as long as you keep paying. Often used to leave a legacy or help your family with an inheritance tax bill, subject to policy terms.

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Excellent Trustpilot
For life
Cover never ends and always pays out2
£2bn
Paid in whole of life and over 50s claims in 20241
£325,000
Inheritance tax free threshold3
97%
Of life insurance claims paid in 20241
Cover that never ends Always pays out Used for inheritance tax Leave a guaranteed legacy

What Whole Of Life Insurance Is

Whole of life insurance is cover with no end date. Unlike term insurance, which only pays out if you die within a set number of years, whole of life pays out whenever you die, as long as you keep paying the premiums. Because a payout is certain, it costs more than term cover.

People use it for three main things: to help their family pay an inheritance tax bill, to leave a guaranteed sum behind as a legacy, or to cover a funeral. It is usually bought later in life, and the policy is almost always written in trust.

How It Works

You take out cover for a chosen amount and pay a monthly premium. The policy has no end date, so as long as you keep paying, it will pay out a tax free lump sum whenever you die. That is the key difference from term insurance, which only pays out if you die within a set number of years.

Term life or whole of life Term only pays if you die in the term. Whole of life always pays. Term life Pays if you die in the term Ends with no payout if you outlive it Whole of life Always pays out, whenever you die Because the payout is certain, whole of life costs more than term cover.

Whole of life is medically underwritten, so you answer health questions and the insurer may ask your GP for a report. A healthy applicant can get a larger sum for the money. You can usually take out a policy up to about age 80. Most modern policies have no cash in value, so if you stop paying, the cover ends.

Guaranteed Or Reviewable Premiums

This is the most important choice with whole of life, and it is easy to get caught out. There are two ways the premium can be set.

  • Guaranteed premiums. The price is fixed at the start and never changes, for life. It costs more at first, but you always know what you will pay.
  • Reviewable premiums. The price starts lower, but the insurer reviews it every 5 or 10 years and it can rise sharply, especially as you get older. It can become unaffordable later, just when you most need the cover to stay in force.
Guaranteed or reviewable premiums Reviewable starts cheaper but can climb (illustrative) £45 £0 Guaranteed, fixed for life Reviewable, rises at reviews Start 10 years 20 years 30 years Illustrative. Guaranteed costs more at first but never changes. Reviewable can rise sharply later in life.

For long term cover, most people prefer guaranteed premiums, because the certainty is worth the higher starting price. If you are quoted a low reviewable premium, check how it could change over time before you decide.

What It Is Used For

  • Helping with an inheritance tax bill. The most common reason, giving your family the cash to pay the tax without selling the home.
  • Leaving a guaranteed legacy. A set sum for children, grandchildren or a charity, which is certain to be paid.
  • Covering a funeral. Often through a simpler guaranteed acceptance over 50s plan, which is a type of whole of life cover for a small sum.
  • Supporting a lifelong dependant. For example a child who will always need care, where cover that never ends makes sense.

Whole Of Life And Inheritance Tax

Inheritance tax is charged at 40% on the part of your estate above the £325,000 nil rate band.3 Whole of life insurance does not reduce that tax. What it does is provide a guaranteed, tax free lump sum that your family can use to pay the bill, so they do not have to sell the family home or other assets to find the money.

For couples, this is often arranged as a joint life second death policy, which pays out when the second partner dies, which is usually when the tax becomes due on the combined estate. Many policies also let you increase the cover over time, so it keeps pace if your estate grows.

Paul Gillooly, Founder of Surely

“Two things make or break a whole of life policy. First, choose guaranteed premiums if you can, so a price rise at 80 cannot force you to drop the cover. Second, write it in trust. If you do not, the payout lands back in your estate and can increase the very inheritance tax bill it was meant to pay. Both are simple to get right at the start.”

Paul Gillooly
Founder, Surely

What It Costs

Whole of life costs more than term cover, because the payout is certain rather than just possible. The price depends most on the amount of cover, your age and your health. Here are some illustrative monthly costs for a healthy non smoker with guaranteed premiums.

CoverAge 40Age 50Age 60
£50,000£45£72£115
£100,000£80£130£210
£200,000£150£250£400

Healthy non smoker, guaranteed premiums. Surely analysis of published pricing, illustrative and not quotes.4 For smaller sums aimed at a funeral, a guaranteed acceptance over 50s plan can start from about £5 a month.

Writing It In Trust

Writing a whole of life policy in trust is almost always the right move, and it is usually free. A trust means the payout goes straight to the people you choose, outside your estate. That brings two big benefits: the money reaches your family quickly, without waiting for probate, and it does not add to your estate for inheritance tax.

This matters most for inheritance tax planning. Without a trust, the payout is counted as part of your estate, which can increase the very tax bill the policy was meant to cover. Most insurers provide standard trust forms, and you can usually name specific people or a wider group of family members.

Whole of life suits some clear situations, but it is not for everyone. It is fair to weigh it up.

  • It can suit you if you want to leave a guaranteed sum, expect an inheritance tax bill, or need cover that lasts your whole life rather than a fixed term.
  • Term cover may be better if you only need protection for a set period, such as while a mortgage is running or the children are growing up, because it costs far less.
  • Bear in mind that because it pays out whenever you die, living a long time can mean your total premiums add up to more than a small payout, and most policies have no cash in value.

Why Use Surely

Whole of life has more moving parts than term cover, from the premium type to the trust, and small choices have big effects. Surely helps you get them right.

We explain guaranteed and reviewable premiums, trusts and inheritance tax in plain English, and compare cover from selected UK insurers so you can see the difference. We compile and cross check real UK pricing and claims data.

The reassurance is in the numbers. In 2024, UK insurers paid a record £8 billion in protection claims, with whole of life and over 50s plans accounting for more than £2 billion of that.1 Surely helps you compare and get quotes online, and does not give advice itself.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does whole of life insurance always pay out?

Yes. As long as you keep paying the premiums, it pays a tax free lump sum whenever you die. That certainty is why it costs more than term cover.

How is it different from term life insurance?

Term cover runs for a set number of years and only pays out if you die within that time. Whole of life has no end date and always pays out, so it is dearer.

Should I choose guaranteed or reviewable premiums?

Guaranteed premiums cost more at first but never change. Reviewable premiums start cheaper but can rise sharply at each review and become unaffordable later. For long term cover, most people prefer the certainty of guaranteed premiums.

Do I need to write it in trust?

For inheritance tax planning it is essential. Without a trust, the payout is added to your estate and can increase the very tax bill it was meant to pay. A trust is usually free to set up.

Can I cash it in?

Most modern protection policies have no cash in value. If you stop paying the premiums, the cover simply ends, so choose a premium you can keep up.

Is the payout taxed?

It is paid tax free. It counts towards inheritance tax, charged at 40% above £325,000, unless the policy is written in trust. Tax treatment depends on your circumstances and can change.3

This guide deals with death and inheritance. For impartial money guidance you can use MoneyHelper, the government backed service.

Getting Started

Decide what the cover is for and how much you need. If it is for inheritance tax, work out the likely bill, choose guaranteed premiums for certainty, and write the policy in trust from the start. Then compare a few insurers and answer the health questions honestly. For a large sum or complex estate, it is worth taking regulated advice.

Cover, price and eligibility depend on your age, health, smoker status and insurer terms. Whole of life pays out whenever you die, subject to continued premiums, and total premiums may exceed a small payout. Inheritance tax planning can be complex; this guide is general information, not advice. Surely helps you compare insurance and does not provide regulated financial advice.

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.

The data on this page draws on:

  • Association of British Insurers and Group Risk Development, protection claims data 2024, for claims paid and the whole of life and over 50s share.
  • MoneyHelper, guidance on whole of life insurance and how it works.
  • GOV.UK, for the inheritance tax threshold and rate.
  • Published UK pricing and plan terms, 2025 to 2026, for costs, premium types and entry ages.

Cost figures are illustrative examples for a healthy applicant, not quotes. Your own price depends on your age, health and the cover and premium type you choose.

Surely compares cover from a selected panel of UK insurers and protection advisers, not the whole of the market. When you ask for a quote you may receive one online or be contacted by a qualified protection adviser from our panel. Surely may receive a commission, which does not affect the price you pay.

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

Sources

  1. Association of British Insurers and Group Risk Development, “Record £8bn paid out in vital protection claims during 2024”, published July 2025. Around 97% of life claims paid; whole of life and over 50s plans accounted for more than £2 billion.
  2. MoneyHelper, impartial guidance on whole of life insurance.
  3. GOV.UK, Inheritance Tax: nil rate band of £325,000 and a 40% rate above it. Tax treatment depends on your circumstances and may change.
  4. Surely analysis of published UK whole of life pricing and plan terms, 2025 to 2026, including guaranteed and reviewable premiums and a maximum entry age of about 80. Figures are illustrative and not quotes.
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 18 Jun, 2026

We regularly review and update our content.

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