Thermodynamic Automaton Computer
writing framework. Every section resolves one reader confusion state. Read straight through.
Founder, TWIST POOL Labs · TAC Research · NanoCERN Unit, Pune
First-principles finance educator · 10+ years in Indian capital markets
Insurance agents are incentivised to sell you the product that pays them the highest commission. Spoiler: that is rarely the product that is best for your family. Here is the unbiased, first-principles analysis.…
Insurance agents are incentivised to sell you the product that pays them the highest commission. Spoiler: that is rarely the product that is best for your family. Here is the unbiased, first-principles analysis.
1. The Core Question: What is Insurance For?
Insurance is a financial instrument that replaces income lost due to a specific risk — death, illness, accident. That is its only job. It is not an investment, not a savings plan, not a wealth-building tool.
When you conflate insurance with investment (as endowment and ULIPs do), you get a product that does both jobs poorly.
2. Term Insurance: Pure Protection
How it works: You pay a fixed annual premium. If you die during the policy term, your nominee receives the sum assured. If you survive to the end of term, you receive nothing.
Why “nothing back” is a feature, not a bug: The premium is dramatically lower because the insurer is only paying for one risk — your death. A ₹1 crore term plan for a 30-year-old costs approximately ₹8,000–₹12,000 per year for a 30-year term. That is ₹800–₹1,200/month.
The math of “buy term and invest the difference”:
- Term + SIP: ₹12,000/year in term + ₹36,000/year in equity SIP (₹3,000/month)
- Endowment: ₹48,000/year total (same total outflow)
- Over 30 years at 12% CAGR: The SIP portfolio grows to ~₹1.06 crore
- Typical endowment maturity value: ₹15–20 lakh (the rest goes in commissions and expenses)
Verdict: Buy term + invest the difference. Always.
3. Endowment Plan: Mixed Product
How it works: You pay higher premiums. On survival, you receive the sum assured plus bonus. On death, your nominee receives the sum assured.
The problems:
- Returns are 4–6% CAGR — consistently below inflation
- The death cover is typically too low (₹5–10 lakh for a premium of ₹40,000–₹50,000/year)
- Lock-in period of 15–20 years; surrendering early results in major loss
- Agent commission of 25–40% on first-year premium — the highest incentive in financial sales
When might it make sense: For someone with zero financial discipline who will definitely not invest the difference otherwise. Even then, better alternatives (NPS, PPF) exist.
4. ULIP: The Third Option (Usually the Worst)
ULIPs (Unit Linked Insurance Plans) combine insurance with market-linked investment. The problem: after deducting premium allocation charges, policy administration charges, fund management charges, and mortality charges, the effective investment that reaches equity markets in the first 5 years is often 60–70% of your premium.
A direct equity mutual fund (zero commission) with a standalone term plan is almost always superior.
5. How Much Term Insurance Do You Need?
The 10–15x Rule: Your sum assured should be 10–15 times your annual gross income.
- Annual Income ₹8 lakh → Sum Assured: ₹80 lakh to ₹1.2 crore
- Annual Income ₹15 lakh → Sum Assured: ₹1.5 crore to ₹2.25 crore
This ensures your family can invest the sum assured in safe instruments (7% FD/debt fund) and replace your income indefinitely without touching the principal.
Summary Comparison Table
| Feature | Term Insurance | Endowment Plan |
|---|---|---|
| Premium (₹1 crore cover) | ₹8,000–₹12,000/year | ₹40,000–₹60,000/year |
| Death Benefit | ₹1 crore | ₹5–10 lakh typically |
| Maturity Benefit | Zero | 4–6% CAGR equivalent |
| Investment Return | Separate SIP: 12% CAGR | 4–6% (built in, low) |
| Liquidity | None needed (pure protection) | Lock-in 15–20 years |
| Agent Commission | 5–15% | 25–40% |
The Smart Friend’s Verdict
If you have dependants (spouse, children, parents), you need term insurance. Period. Buy the maximum cover your budget allows — pure term, no-frills. Then invest the savings in equity mutual funds.
Endowment plans are solutions looking for a problem. The problem they solve — “what if I don’t die?” — is not the problem insurance was invented for. Do not let an agent conflate the two.
Back to Personal Finance Basics for the complete protection framework.
Frequently Asked Questions
Insurance is a financial instrument that replaces income lost due to a specific risk — death, illness, accident.
See the full explanation in the section above.
See the full explanation in the section above.
ULIPs (Unit Linked Insurance Plans) combine insurance with market-linked investment.
This ensures your family can invest the sum assured in safe instruments (7% FD/debt fund) and replace your income indefinitely without touching the principal.