Getting life insurance at 80 or older is harder than it used to be, but it is still possible β and often more affordable than people expect once they know where to look. This guide covers the 8 providers that still accept applicants in their 80s, what each actually costs, the waiting period trap most people fall into, and which option makes sense depending on your health and budget.
Once you turn 81, term life insurance is no longer available from any carrier in the United States. Your only options are permanent coverage: final expense whole life, simplified issue whole life, or guaranteed issue whole life. These are very different products that look similar on paper but behave completely differently when a claim is filed. The most important distinction: any policy that asks zero health questions will always have a two-year waiting period for natural causes of death. If you pass away from illness in the first two years, your family gets back only the premiums paid β not the full benefit. Policies that ask a short list of health questions can qualify you for immediate, first-day coverage β and usually cost less. The goal of this guide is to help you understand which category you fall into before you talk to anyone trying to sell you something.
These are the questions people over 80 most commonly search for and rarely get a straight answer to. Every response below reflects what’s actually happening in the market right now.
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Can an 80-year-old actually get life insurance? Yes β but options narrow considerably Β· Final expense whole life is the most common path Β· Coverage up to $25,000 typically available without a medical exam Β· A handful of carriers issue policies up to age 90The short answer is yes, and the number of carriers willing to write new policies on people in their 80s is larger than most people assume β provided the coverage goal is modest and focused on final expenses rather than income replacement. Once you turn 81, your only realistic options without a medical exam are final expense whole life and guaranteed issue whole life, both of which max out at $25,000 in most cases. If you are exactly 80 and in reasonably good health, a handful of carriers will still consider you for simplified issue policies up to $50,000, but these require answering health questions and meeting underwriting standards. The critical rule: do not wait. Every six months of delay raises the monthly premium on a $10,000 final expense policy by a measurable amount, and the carriers accepting applicants in this age range have the right to stop accepting new applications at any time.
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How much does life insurance cost at 80? $10,000 final expense policy: roughly $90β$160/month at age 80 Β· Women pay 10β15% less than men Β· Non-smokers pay less Β· Premiums are fixed once issued β they never increase Β· Guaranteed issue costs more than simplified issueThe price range for a $10,000 final expense policy for an 80-year-old varies considerably by carrier, gender, health status, and whether the policy is simplified issue (health questions, no exam) or guaranteed issue (no questions, no exam). For a female nonsmoker in average health, expect monthly premiums in the range of $90β$130 for simplified issue, or $120β$160 for guaranteed issue on the same $10,000 benefit. Men pay roughly 10β20% more. By 85, those same policies cost significantly more β often $170β$300 per month β because mortality risk accelerates. The math worth doing: if you’re paying $150 per month for a $10,000 policy, you’ll break even (total premiums paid equals the death benefit) in about five and a half years. If you live substantially longer than that, the policy has delivered real value. If your health is declining and you have reason to believe the two-year waiting period is a real risk, that calculation changes β and that’s exactly when talking to an independent agent who works with multiple carriers is worthwhile.
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What is the two-year waiting period and how do I avoid it? Guaranteed issue policies all have 2-year waiting periods β if you die from natural causes in the first 2 years, beneficiaries receive only premiums paid back plus interest Β· To avoid it: answer health questions (simplified issue) Β· Accidental death is almost always covered from day one regardlessThe graded benefit period β commonly called the waiting period β is the single most important thing to understand before buying life insurance over 80. Every guaranteed issue policy (one that asks no health questions) automatically includes a two-year restriction: if the insured person dies from illness or natural causes within the first 24 months, the policy does not pay the full death benefit. Instead, it refunds the premiums paid plus a modest interest rate. Accidental death, however, is covered from the very first day on virtually all policies. To get immediate, first-day coverage for natural death, you must answer a short health questionnaire β which means the insurer is evaluating your risk and may decline or charge more based on your answers. Conditions like well-controlled high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, or prior cancer that has been in remission for several years often still qualify. The trap many people fall into is assuming the cheapest guaranteed-issue policy is the best deal, without realizing the waiting period means it could pay nothing to their family in the near term.
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What is final expense insurance and is it the same as burial insurance? Yes β the terms are interchangeable Β· It’s a small whole life policy ($5,000β$25,000) designed specifically for end-of-life costs Β· Premiums never increase Β· Policy never expires Β· Cash value builds slowly Β· Payout is unrestricted cash β family can use it for anythingFinal expense, burial insurance, and funeral insurance all describe the same product: a small whole life policy designed specifically for people in their later years who want to cover end-of-life costs without burdening their family. The death benefit β typically between $5,000 and $25,000 β is paid as a tax-free, unrestricted lump sum to the named beneficiary. That beneficiary can use it for funeral costs, outstanding medical bills, credit card debts, or any other pressing expense. Nothing mandates it be spent on the funeral itself, despite the name. The policy builds a small amount of cash value over time β not enough to serve as an investment, but worth knowing about if you ever need to borrow against it or surrender it. The premiums are locked in at the rate when you apply β they will never increase even if your health deteriorates later. And unlike term insurance, the policy has no expiration date: it pays whenever you die, whether that’s in two years or twenty. For most people over 80, this is the most practical and accessible form of life insurance available.
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I have serious health problems β can I still get coverage? Yes β guaranteed issue accepts everyone ages 50β85 with no health questions Β· The trade-off: higher premiums and the 2-year waiting period Β· If you have heart disease, recent cancer, COPD, or are on dialysis, guaranteed issue may be your only realistic pathGuaranteed issue life insurance exists precisely for people who cannot pass simplified issue underwriting. There are no health questions, no medical records review, and no possibility of denial based on health β the only requirements are that you fall within the eligible age range (typically 50β85) and live in a state where the carrier is licensed. The coverage limit is almost always $25,000 or less, and the two-year graded benefit applies. The premium is higher than simplified issue for the same coverage amount because the insurer is accepting unknown risk. However, for someone with serious health conditions β recent heart attack or stroke, active cancer treatment, end-stage renal disease, or other severe diagnoses β guaranteed issue may genuinely be the only option available, and it is still meaningfully better than leaving family members with a $9,000β$10,000 funeral bill to cover out of pocket, often in the same week as the loss. Work with an independent agent who represents multiple carriers to get the lowest guaranteed issue rate available in your state.
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Can I take out life insurance on my 80-year-old parent? Yes β but your parent must consent and sign the application Β· You cannot insure a parent without their knowledge Β· You must have “insurable interest” (financial impact from their death) Β· Best approach: final expense policy with parent as insured, adult child as beneficiaryThis is one of the most searched questions in this category, and it comes from a real place: adult children who worry that a parent’s death will leave the family scrambling to cover funeral costs, outstanding medical bills, or estate fees. The answer is yes β adult children can absolutely take out a life insurance policy on a parent β but the law requires the parent’s full knowledge and consent. The parent must sign the application. The parent is the insured; the adult child is the beneficiary. You cannot take out a policy on a parent without their participation, no matter how well-intentioned. Once the parent agrees, the process works like any other final expense application. If the parent is over 85 or has serious health conditions, guaranteed issue is typically the most accessible path. If the parent is in the 80β85 range with manageable health, simplified issue may offer better pricing and immediate coverage. The most important conversation to have with an aging parent is about what they want their final arrangements to look like β the life insurance conversation flows naturally from that, and framing it that way tends to generate more cooperation.
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Is it worth buying life insurance at 80, or should I just save the money? Depends on whether you already have $10,000β$15,000 set aside specifically for final expenses Β· If yes and those funds are protected: save it Β· If your savings could be wiped out by medical bills or need to support a surviving spouse: insurance makes senseThis is the question most insurance guides avoid, and the honest answer is: it depends on your financial situation. Life insurance at 80 costs more per dollar of benefit than at younger ages. If you genuinely have $10,000β$15,000 set aside in a dedicated account specifically for final expenses, and that money won’t be touched for other purposes, and a surviving spouse won’t need it for living expenses, then self-insuring through savings is mathematically reasonable. The problem with that logic in practice: medical costs in the final months of life frequently consume savings that were earmarked for other purposes, leaving families with nothing liquid at the time of death. And funeral directors require payment before services, not after the estate settles. A final expense policy guarantees that a specific, accessible sum of money will be available immediately β within 24β48 hours of a claim in most cases. That liquidity guarantee is often the real value, separate from the premium math. If your budget is genuinely tight, buying a policy that strains your monthly income is not the right choice either β overstretching your finances to maintain a premium creates risk of lapse, at which point you’ve paid for nothing.
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What’s the truth about the “$9.95 a month” life insurance ads? At age 80, $9.95/month buys roughly one “unit” of coverage β as little as $800β$900 in actual death benefit Β· Covering a $10,000 funeral requires 8β12 units = $80β$120/month Β· Total cost is comparable to other carriers, with less transparency Β· Independent agents almost always find better valueThe $9.95 per month advertisement β most commonly associated with Colonial Penn β has been running on television for years and reaches a lot of people in their 80s. The price is technically accurate: $9.95 does buy one unit of coverage. What the ads don’t explain is that the death benefit per unit depends on your age and gender, and at age 80, one unit might provide $800β$900 in coverage. To cover a $10,000 funeral, a person in their early 80s would need 10β12 units at $9.95 each β which totals $99β$120 per month. That’s comparable to what a more transparent carrier charges for a clean $10,000 final expense policy. The difference is that the unit structure obscures the true cost-per-dollar-of-coverage and makes direct comparison difficult. This isn’t unique to Colonial Penn β several mail-solicitation insurers use similar opaque pricing structures. The straightforward fix: work with an independent insurance agent (one who represents multiple carriers, not just one) and ask them to show you the cost per $1,000 of coverage from at least three different companies. That single comparison almost always reveals better value than any television advertisement.
Every provider below still accepts new applicants in their 80s as of the most recent available data. Maximum issue ages, coverage amounts, and exam requirements vary by state β confirm directly before applying. All ratings are from A.M. Best unless noted.
| Provider | Max Issue Age | Coverage Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mutual of Omaha Top Rated | Up to age 85A+ AM Best Β· No exam required | $2,000β$25,000 | Final expense with instant coverage decision Β· Budget-friendly entry level at $2,000 |
| State Farm | Up to age 90A++ AM Best Β· Guaranteed issue available | $10,000β$15,000 (GI) | Seniors who want the highest-rated carrier Β· Guaranteed issue final expense no exam |
| AARP / New York Life | Up to age 80A++ AM Best Β· AARP membership required ($16/yr) | $2,500β$25,000 | AARP members wanting guaranteed acceptance Β· Fixed rates Β· New York Life backing |
| Transamerica | Up to age 85A AM Best Β· Built-in living benefit riders | $25,000β$100,000 | Final expense with chronic/critical illness riders Β· Broader coverage than most at this age |
| Gerber Life (Adult) | Up to age 80A AM Best Β· Fully online application | $5,000β$25,000 | Tech-comfortable seniors who want digital application Β· No phone calls or agent visits required |
| Physicians Mutual | Up to age 85A- AM Best Β· Guaranteed issue available | $2,000β$20,000 | Seniors with serious health conditions who need guaranteed acceptance without waiting |
| Foresters Financial | Up to age 85A AM Best Β· PlanRight simplified issue | $2,000β$35,000 | Moderate health issues; flexible underwriting; member benefits included with policy |
| Ethos Life | Up to age 85A+ AM Best (underwriters) Β· Online platform | $2,000β$30,000 | Simplified and guaranteed issue options Β· Fast approvals Β· Fully digital for tech-comfortable seniors |
At 80 and older, the difference in pricing between carriers for identical coverage can be 30β50%. An independent agent who represents multiple carriers simultaneously can shop the entire market in one call and find the highest classification your health qualifies for β which usually produces both better pricing and the possibility of immediate coverage instead of a graded waiting period. Going directly to a single carrier’s website almost always costs more and limits your options.
Use the buttons below to find independent insurance agents, funeral homes to research pre-planning costs, or your state insurance department if you need to verify a carrier’s license or file a complaint.
- Step 1: Determine what you already have. Pull out any existing life insurance policies and call the insurer to request a current in-force illustration. Confirm the policy is still active and the death benefit hasn’t changed.
- Step 2: Decide on a coverage goal. A $10,000β$15,000 final expense policy covers the average funeral. If you want to leave something for a surviving spouse or pay off small debts, a $20,000β$25,000 policy may be more appropriate.
- Step 3: Be honest about your health. The more health questions you can answer favorably, the lower your premium and the more likely you get first-day coverage without a waiting period. Simplified issue almost always beats guaranteed issue on value.
- Step 4: Work with an independent agent who represents multiple carriers, not a single company’s captive agent. Ask them to show you the cost per $1,000 of coverage from at least three carriers side by side.
- Step 5: Only apply with carriers rated A- or better by AM Best. Financial strength matters β you need to know the company can pay a claim 10 or 20 years from now.
- Step 6: Run the break-even math before signing. Divide the death benefit by the monthly premium to see how many months of payments equals the payout. If the result is longer than your realistic life expectancy, consider whether a dedicated savings account serves you better.
All provider information, maximum issue ages, coverage amounts, and premium estimates reflect publicly reported data and are subject to change without notice. Rates vary by state, health classification, gender, and individual underwriting outcomes. Maximum issue ages listed may differ in New York, which maintains separate insurance regulations. AM Best ratings and policy details should be verified directly with each carrier before applying. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance advice or an offer of coverage. This page has no affiliation with any insurance carrier, agent, or financial institution.