The quote I ignored at 26

I still remember the quote. Non-smoker, salaried, no declared conditions, 1 Cr cover till age 60. The number on the screen was ₹7,200 a year, or about ₹600 a month. For roughly the price of two Swiggy orders, I could have locked in a death benefit that would actually clear my parents' home loan if something happened to me.

I did not buy it. The reasoning was the reasoning every 26-year-old has. I was fine. I had a decent employer group cover. I would "figure it out next year." Next year turned into seven years.

The lesson in one line: term insurance gets 8 to 12 percent more expensive every year you delay, and the premium you lock in today stays flat for the entire policy term. The decision is not whether to buy, it is whether to buy at today's price or next year's price.

How premium moves with age

Insurers price term cover on one thing above all: expected mortality. Your health, gender and smoking status are modifiers, but age is the baseline. The premium curve for a 1 Cr non-smoker male cover till age 60 looks roughly like this.

Annual premium for a 1 Cr term plan, by age at purchase

Indicative market quotes, non-smoker male, cover till age 60. Actual numbers vary by insurer.

Term premium by age 0 10k 20k 30k 40k ₹7.2k ₹11.5k ₹21k ₹36k 26 28 30 33 36 39 42 45 Age at purchase
Annual premium, 1 Cr cover till age 60

The shape matters more than the exact numbers. Between 26 and 30, the curve is almost flat. Between 30 and 40, it steepens. After 40, the curve gets ugly: every extra year adds 10 to 15 percent, and the same cover you could have bought for under ₹600 a month at 26 now costs ₹3,000-plus a month.

The medical test that changed everything

Here is the part nobody warns you about. When I finally sat down at 33 to buy the policy, the insurer asked for a tele-medical plus a full-body medical. Fine. Two things showed up.

  • Fasting blood sugar at 108 mg/dL, which is borderline pre-diabetic.
  • BMI of 28.6, classified as overweight for my height.

Neither was a dealbreaker. But the insurer loaded the premium. The base quote for a 33-year-old was around ₹13,500. After the loading, my issued premium was ₹18,900. A 40 percent loading, every year, for the next 27 years.

Why this matters: the loading is not a one-time penalty. You pay it every year for the life of the policy. In my case, that single medical reading added up to a little over ₹1.4 lakh over the policy term, for exactly the same ₹1 Cr cover I could have bought clean at 26.

Lifetime cost: 26 vs 33 vs 40

The sticker price on the quote screen hides what you actually pay over the life of the policy. Here is what the same 1 Cr cover till age 60 costs in total, if bought at three different ages.

Total premium paid over policy lifetime, 1 Cr cover

Annual premium × years of cover till age 60. Same sum insured, same insurer.

Lifetime premium comparison ₹2.45L Age 26 34 years × ₹7.2k ₹5.10L Age 33 27 years × ₹18.9k (with loading) ₹6.80L Age 40 20 years × ₹34k
Bought early Delayed with health loading Late, clean medical

A few things stand out. Starting at 26 is cheapest in absolute terms, even though you pay for the most years, because the annual premium is so low. Starting at 33 with a loading costs more than twice as much. Starting at 40 costs almost 3x, and you get 14 fewer years of protection for that money.

What actually moves your premium

If you are about to get a quote, these are the levers the insurer will pull, ranked by how much they actually matter.

Age
Biggest lever. Every year adds 8 to 12 percent. This is the one you can still control by buying today.
Smoking
Adds 50 to 100 percent to the base premium. Declaring non-smoker when you smoke is the fastest way to get your claim rejected.
BMI and sugar
The two most common reasons for a premium loading. A 6-month fitness push before the medical is one of the highest ROI things you can do.
Occupation
Desk job vs field job vs armed forces. Salaried IT or BFSI usually gets the best rates.
Policy term
A cover till 60 is almost always cheaper than till 75, and for most Indians 60 is the right number, since that is when major liabilities end.
Payout structure
Lump sum beats monthly income riders. Keep the base plain vanilla, skip the add-ons you will never claim.

If you are buying today

Three things I would tell my 26-year-old self, in order.

  1. Do not wait for the "right" time. Every year of delay is a permanent hike. The right time to buy is the week you get your quote.
  2. Book the medical test when you are at your healthiest. Not right after a festive weekend, not after a work-from-home month with zero activity. A clean medical is worth lakhs over the life of the policy.
  3. Buy the cover you actually need, which is higher than you think. A 15x income rule of thumb works for most people starting out, but if you have a home loan or kids, use the Human Life Value method, not the rule of thumb.
One more thing: take the cover till 60, not till 75. By 60 your home loan is done, your kids are earning, and your retirement corpus is doing the heavy lifting. Paying premium past 60 for a dependent who no longer depends on you is pure waste.

Run your own number

Do not trust a stranger's story more than your own math. Put your age, income and liabilities into the calculator and get a real cover estimate, then get quotes for that cover from three insurers. If the premium stings, that is the universe telling you to buy sooner, not later.

Term Insurance Cover Calculator
Compare 15x income, DIME and Human Life Value for your situation. Honest cover estimate, no agent nudge.
Policy Ladder Calculator
Split your cover into three tranches matched to liability, kid and retirement years. Typically cuts lifetime premium by 20 to 30 percent.