When you buy a term insurance plan, it can feel as though the premium is simply a number an insurer “decides”. In reality, pricing is built on risk and mathematics. Insurers estimate the likelihood of a claim during the policy term, factor in operating costs, and then price the cover accordingly. The good news is that many inputs are transparent, and several are within your control. Understanding what influences premiums helps you choose the right cover, avoid overpaying, and set expectations about what you can change versus what you can’t.
Age and Policy Term: The Core Maths Behind Pricing
Age is one of the biggest drivers because it correlates strongly with mortality risk. The younger you are when you start, the lower the probability of a claim during the same coverage period.
Why insurers charge more as age increases:
- Risk rises with age, especially over longer terms.
- Longer policy durations increase the window for a claim.
- Health conditions tend to accumulate over time.
What you can control:
- Buying earlier rather than postponing.
- Choosing a term that matches your key financial responsibilities (mortgage, dependants’ education).
What you can’t control:
- Your current age at the time of purchase.
Health and Lifestyle: Underwriting Looks at Predictable Risk
Insurers assess health history and lifestyle to understand how predictable (or elevated) your risk is. This is where the process can feel personal, but it is still data-led.
Common factors they evaluate:
- BMI, blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes indicators
- Smoking, vaping, alcohol intake
- Pre-existing conditions and family medical history
- Occupational hazards and high-risk hobbies
What you can control:
- Quitting smoking (often the biggest premium lever).
- Improving fitness markers over time and reapplying if appropriate.
- Disclosing accurately to avoid claim disputes later.
What you can’t control:
- Genetic predispositions and certain medical histories.
Sum Assured and Add-ons: More Cover, More Cost — For Clear Reasons
Your premium reflects the size of the promise the insurer is making. A higher sum assured means a larger potential payout, which increases the insurer’s expected liability.
What typically increases premiums:
- Higher cover amount (sum assured)
- Optional riders (e.g., critical illness, accidental death benefit)
- Premium payment options (limited pay vs pay-till-term)
- More comprehensive features and benefits
Smart ways to optimise without underinsuring:
- Calculate cover based on income replacement, liabilities, and goals.
- Add riders only where they meaningfully reduce financial risk.
- Avoid “feature stacking” that doesn’t match your needs.
Occupation, Travel, and Habits: External Risk Factors You Might Overlook
Some professions and habits carry a greater chance of accidental death or exposure to hazardous environments. Similarly, frequent travel to high-risk regions can affect underwriting.
Examples insurers may price in:
- Jobs involving heights, heavy machinery, mining, or offshore work
- Regular international travel to regions with higher risk profiles
- Night shifts and fatigue-related risk patterns (in some cases)
What you can control:
- Being clear about your role and duties (job titles can be misleading).
- Updating details if your occupation changes.
What you can’t control:
- Industry-level risk ratings applied by insurers.
Conclusion: Pricing Is Logical — and You Have More Influence Than You Think
The premium one pays for a term insurance plan is not a shot in the dark; it is the result of structured risk evaluation. Each of the following factors has a well-defined role to play in the pricing of your term insurance premium: age, health, lifestyle, cover amount, and risk exposure. The trick is in being able to differentiate between those factors that are fixed and cannot be changed and those levers that one can use-buying early, choosing the appropriate term and sum assured, and maintaining healthier habits. And when one has that clarity, one can compare quotes with confidence, ask better questions, and select a term insurance plan that fits not only one’s budget but also one’s protection goals.

