Life Insurance in West Virginia
Nobody likes thinking about their own mortality. But life insurance isn't really about you—it's about the people who depend on you.
Life insurance provides financial protection for your family, pays off debts, covers final expenses, and ensures your loved ones can maintain their standard of living when you're gone. We help you understand your options, determine how much coverage makes sense, and find affordable policies that fit your budget.
Who Needs Life Insurance?
Basically everyone—or at least everyone eventually. If people depend on your income, you need it. If your death would leave debts behind, you need it. If funeral costs would strain your family's finances, you need it.
Even young, single people benefit from getting coverage early. You'll never be healthier or get better rates than you are right now. Lock in affordable premiums while you can, because once you have health issues, a family, or a mortgage, coverage becomes more expensive—or harder to get.
Term vs Permanent Life Insurance
These are the two main types of life insurance. They work differently, cost differently, and serve different purposes. Here's what you need to know.
Term Life Insurance
Coverage for a specific period of time—usually 10, 20, or 30 years.
Much more affordable than permanent insurance—often 5-10 times cheaper for the same coverage amount
Simple and straightforward—you pay premiums, you're covered. Period.
Perfect for temporary needs—protecting your family while kids are young, covering a mortgage, or replacing income until retirement
No cash value—if you outlive the term, the policy expires and you receive nothing back
Premiums increase if you renew—rates are locked during your term but go up significantly if you want to extend coverage
Best For:
Young families, people with mortgages, income replacement needs, anyone on a budget who needs maximum coverage
Permanent Life Insurance
Coverage that lasts your entire life—as long as you pay the premiums.
Builds cash value—part of your premium goes into an account you can borrow against or withdraw from
Level premiums—your payment stays the same for life (assuming you choose level premium)
Never expires—guaranteed death benefit no matter when you die
Significantly more expensive—often 5-10 times the cost of term for the same death benefit
More complex—various types (whole life, universal life, variable life) with different features and risks
Best For:
Estate planning, lifelong dependents with special needs, high net worth individuals, business succession planning, final expense coverage in later years
Our Honest Recommendation
For most people, term life insurance is the better choice. It provides substantial coverage at an affordable price during the years when your family needs protection most. You can buy a $500,000 20-year term policy for what a $50,000 permanent policy would cost.
That said, permanent insurance serves important purposes for certain situations—estate planning, business needs, or guaranteed coverage later in life. We help you understand which type (or combination) makes sense for your specific circumstances.
How the Process Works
Applying for life insurance isn't complicated, but it does involve some steps. Here's what to expect from application to receiving your policy.
Initial Application
We gather basic information—your age, health status, lifestyle habits (smoking, etc.), occupation, and hobbies. We discuss how much coverage you need and what type makes sense. This initial conversation usually takes 20-30 minutes.
Medical Exam (If Required)
For most policies over $50,000-$100,000, the insurance company requires a medical exam. A nurse or examiner comes to your home or office at your convenience. They check your height, weight, blood pressure, and collect blood and urine samples.
Smaller policies may not require an exam—some carriers offer "simplified issue" or "guaranteed issue" policies that skip the medical exam but typically cost more or offer less coverage.
Underwriting Review
The insurance company reviews your application, exam results, and medical history. They assess your risk level and determine your premium. This typically takes 2-6 weeks, though some decisions come back in days for healthy applicants.
Offer & Approval
Once underwriting is complete, the company makes an offer. If you're approved as applied for, great—you get the rate you expected. Sometimes they approve you at a different rate class based on health factors. We review any offer with you to make sure it makes sense.
Policy Delivery & Activation
You pay your first premium and sign the policy. Some carriers require a follow-up health statement to confirm nothing has changed since your exam. Your coverage begins on the date specified in your policy—often backdated to your application date.
Timeline Expectations
- No exam policies:Same day to 1 week
- Standard process:3-6 weeks from application to policy delivery
- Complex cases:6-8 weeks if additional medical records are needed
How Much Coverage Do You Need?
This is the most important question in life insurance. Too little coverage leaves your family struggling. Too much coverage means you're overpaying for protection you don't need. Here are some proven methods to calculate the right amount.
The Income Replacement Method
Rule of Thumb: 10-12 times your annual income
If you earn $60,000 per year, you'd want $600,000-$720,000 in coverage. This amount, invested conservatively, could replace your income for your family. The idea is that your death benefit creates an income stream that replaces what you would have earned.
Example: $700,000 death benefit invested at 5% returns $35,000 per year without touching the principal. If you earned $50,000, this replaces 70% of your income.
The DIME Method
DIME stands for Debt, Income, Mortgage, Education. Add up these four numbers:
- D:Debt — All your debt except the mortgage (car loans, credit cards, student loans, personal loans)
- I:Income — Annual income multiplied by the number of years you want to replace it (usually 5-10 years)
- M:Mortgage — Your remaining mortgage balance
- E:Education — Estimated costs for your kids' college education
Example:
- • Debt: $30,000 (car loans and credit cards)
- • Income: $60,000 × 10 years = $600,000
- • Mortgage: $180,000 remaining balance
- • Education: $100,000 (two kids, in-state college)
- • Total Coverage Needed: $910,000
The Needs-Based Approach
This is the most comprehensive method. Calculate exactly what your family would need:
Immediate Expenses
- • Final expenses (funeral, burial): $10,000-$15,000
- • Estate settlement costs: $5,000-$10,000
- • Immediate family support: $10,000-$25,000
Ongoing Expenses
- • Annual living expenses × number of years of support needed
- • Include: mortgage/rent, utilities, food, transportation, insurance
- • Adjust for surviving spouse's income if applicable
Future Expenses
- • Children's education costs
- • Weddings or other major life events
- • Special needs care if applicable
Debts to Pay Off
- • Mortgage balance
- • Car loans
- • Credit cards, student loans, personal loans
Our Approach
We walk through these calculations with you to determine a coverage amount that makes sense for your specific situation. We consider your income, debts, family size, ages of your children, and long-term financial goals. The goal is to provide adequate protection without overbuying coverage you can't afford or don't need.
Let's Talk About Your Situation
No pressure, no sales pitch. Just an honest conversation about protecting the people who depend on you and finding coverage that fits your budget.
Looking for a different location?
We also serve other areas in West Virginia
Jon Parrack Insurance
Serving Point Pleasant, Mason County (WV) & Southeast Ohio
Point Pleasant, WV