
Most policies only pay out after you’re gone. Modern term life with living benefits can be designed to help you access a portion of your coverage if you’re diagnosed with a serious illness — when your family needs it most.
A serious diagnosis — cancer, a heart attack, a stroke — doesn’t just threaten your life. It threatens your income, your savings, and your family’s stability at the exact moment the bills pile up. Old-school term life does nothing until the funeral. Living benefits change that.
Here’s the part most people never hear: with the right policy design, a critical illness (like a heart attack, stroke, or cancer), a chronic illness, or a terminal diagnosis can let you access part of your own death benefit early — while you’re still alive to use it. Same premium. You’re covered when it counts — not just after you’re gone.
Availability, amounts, and triggers vary by carrier, product, and state. This is educational only — your real illustration shows exactly what your policy can be designed to do.

I’m a licensed insurance professional — and a widower. I lost my wife right after our youngest son was born, and I’ve raised two boys on my own ever since. So when I talk to a family about protecting each other, it isn’t a script. It’s the thing I’ve lived.
My job is simple: explain your options in plain English, run your real numbers, and tell you honestly when what you already have is good enough. No pressure — ever. That’s why my clients send me their best friends.
“Knowing that you are also a widower helped me know you understood our needs… Now if I get sick I will get my life insurance while I’m alive.”
“He made this complex product easy to understand. We chose what worked best for us.”
On many modern term policies, living benefit riders are included at little or no additional cost. Your illustration shows exactly what applies to you — there’s no charge to find out.
Most healthy adults can qualify, and options exist across a wide range of ages and health situations. The only way to know your real rate is a quick, no-pressure conversation — no exam required to get started.
Not exactly — but for many families it fills a similar gap. Chronic-illness living benefits can help pay for care while keeping the death benefit for your family. We’ll walk through the differences on your call.
Bring it. I’ll review what you have honestly — and if it’s already doing the job, I’ll tell you to keep it. If there’s a gap, you’ll see it clearly.
Sample monthly premiums for a healthy 37-year-old male at a Preferred non-tobacco rate — with terminal, chronic, and critical illness living benefits included at no extra charge. Your actual rate depends on your age, health, and carrier. This is an example, not a quote.
See how coverage and term move the price — Male 35, Preferred non-tobacco:
| Coverage | 10-Year | 15-Year | 20-Year | 30-Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | $12.50/mo | $12.76/mo | $13.38/mo | $17.86/mo |
| $250,000 | $14.74/mo | $18.70/mo | $20.02/mo | $29.48/mo |
| $500,000 | $21.56/mo | $26.40/mo | $31.68/mo | $47.52/mo |
Example rates from Midland National Premier Term CS8 illustrations (Florida, 2026). Not an offer or contract; coverage subject to underwriting and policy terms. Your rate varies by age, gender, health, tobacco use, coverage amount, carrier, and state — women and younger applicants often pay less.
Example rates based on a Midland National Premier Term CS8 illustration (FL, Feb 2026). Not an offer or contract; coverage subject to underwriting and policy terms. Rates vary by age, gender, health, tobacco use, coverage amount, carrier, and state.
Your real numbers. Honest answers — including “keep what you have” when that’s the truth. Pick a time below.