
With life insurance, the question isn’t just “Do I need it?” but “What kind do I need?”
Should you go for a pure protection plan that keeps your family safe at the lowest possible cost? Or should you choose a hybrid plan that mixes protection with market-linked investing?
That’s the debate between Term Insurance and ULIP (Unit-Linked Insurance Plan). Both protect. Both have fans. But they serve very different purposes.
TL;DR
- Term Insurance: Affordable, simple, high life cover, no returns. Best for protection.
- ULIP: Insurance + investment combo, higher costs, returns linked to markets, mandatory lock-in.
- Adoption in India: Around 34% of insured Indians own term insurance, while only ~14% of urban Indians have ULIPs.
- Bottom line: For most families, term + mutual funds/SIPs beats ULIP. ULIPs make sense mainly for disciplined, higher-income investors.
Understanding the Products
Term Insurance: Pure Protection
Term insurance is the most straightforward form of life insurance.
- Premium use: 100% of your premium goes to risk cover.
- Benefit: If the policyholder dies during the term, the nominee gets the sum assured. If not, the policy simply ends.
- Costs: Very low: a 30-year-old non-smoker can get ₹1 crore cover for ₹500–1,200 per month.
- Lock-in: None. You can stop any time.
It is designed for income replacement. The idea is that if something happens to you while your family depends on your income, they won’t be left stranded.
ULIP: Insurance + Investment
ULIPs try to play dual roles.
- Premium split: A portion covers life risk (sum assured, often 10x your annual premium). The rest is invested in equity or debt funds.
- Returns: Market-linked, but heavily reduced by charges: premium allocation, fund management, mortality, and switching fees.
- Lock-in: Mandatory 5 years before you can withdraw.
- Cover: Usually lower than term, because a large part of your premium goes into investments.
On paper, ULIPs promise “two benefits in one”. In practice, many policyholders find returns underwhelming, especially in the first few years when charges are highest.
Term Insurance vs ULIP: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Term Insurance | ULIP |
|---|---|---|
| Objective | Pure protection | Insurance + Investment |
| Premium Cost | Very low | High (less of it actually invested) |
| Life Cover | High: ₹1 crore+ possible | Lower (sum assured usually 10x premium) |
| Returns | None | Market-linked, subject to charges |
| Risks | Minimal, transparent | Market + charge risks |
| Lock-in | None | 5 years minimum |
| Best For | Most working Indians | Risk-tolerant, disciplined investors |
What Indians Actually Buy
- Term Insurance: Only 34% of insured Indians actually own a term plan, despite 74% awareness. Most still prefer “return-based” traditional plans.
- ULIPs: Urban ownership is even lower at ~14%, but ULIPs remain significant in insurers’ portfolios. For example, they account for 60%+ of SBI Life’s product mix and around 37% for HDFC Life.
Insurers push ULIPs aggressively because margins and commissions are higher compared to plain term insurance.
Why Term Insurance Often Wins
1. Maximum Cover for Minimum Cost
With term insurance, ₹1 crore cover costs a fraction of ULIP premiums. For the same money, ULIPs offer much lower life cover.
2. Flexibility in Investments
ULIPs restrict you to their funds with multiple charges. Term insurance lets you invest independently in SIPs, PPF, or NPS: typically with better returns and fewer costs.
3. Transparency and Simplicity
Term is straightforward: you pay for cover. ULIPs are layered with charges, fund switches, and lock-ins: complexity that often confuses buyers.
4. Protection First, Not Diluted
If your priority is family protection, term is unbeatable. ULIPs dilute that purpose by tying insurance to market-linked returns.
When ULIPs Might Make Sense
Despite the drawbacks, ULIPs can work for certain investors:
- Long-term, disciplined planners: Those who can stay invested for 10–15 years.
- Tax-driven buyers: They qualify for deductions under Section 80C (available only under the old tax regime) and tax-free maturity under 10(10D).
- Convenience seekers: People who prefer insurance + investment under one product, even if it costs more.
- Affluent individuals: For high earners, partial withdrawals after lock-in and bundled features may be attractive.
But one golden rule holds true: ULIPs should never replace a term plan. At best, they complement it.
Suitability: Who Should Choose What?
- Choose Term Insurance if:
- You’re in your 20s–40s with dependents.
- You want maximum cover at lowest cost.
- You prefer to keep investments separate.
- Choose ULIP if:
- You’re comfortable with market risk + 5-year lock-in.
- You want a disciplined investment vehicle with some insurance cover.
- You fall in a higher tax bracket and want bundled benefits.
Real Voices from the Ground
“Most ULIPs my banker shared have 6% XIRR… returns eaten by charges.”
: A Reddit user reflecting ULIP’s disappointing returns
“Term insurance ₹1 crore at ₹600/month + mutual fund SIPs… gave me actual protection and better returns.”
: Another user sharing why they chose term over ULIP
These real experiences highlight the frustration many buyers feel: ULIPs often sound great in brochures but underdeliver once charges and lock-ins kick in.
FAQs
If ULIPs invest in markets, aren’t they better than term insurance?
Not really. High charges reduce returns. Term + SIP usually builds more wealth while giving higher cover.
Can ULIPs replace term insurance?
No. The insurance cover in ULIPs is too low. Term must be the foundation of your financial plan.
Are ULIPs risk-free?
No. The investment portion carries market risk. Returns are not guaranteed.
Why are ULIPs so heavily marketed?
Because insurers and agents earn higher commissions compared to plain term plans.
What if I already own a ULIP?
Don’t exit blindly. Check surrender charges and lock-in rules. But ensure you also own a separate term plan for adequate protection.
Is the tax treatment different for term insurance vs ULIP?
Both qualify for Section 80C deductions on premiums (up to Rs 1.5 lakh per year). For term insurance, the death benefit is tax-free under Section 10(10D). For ULIPs, the maturity proceeds are tax-free only if the annual premium does not exceed Rs 2.5 lakh. ULIPs with higher premiums attract capital gains tax as per the Finance Act 2021 amendments.
What is the minimum period for a ULIP to become profitable?
Staying invested in a ULIP for at least 10-15 years is necessary to see meaningful returns to see meaningful returns, because the first 3-5 years have the highest charges (premium allocation, policy administration, fund management). The mandatory 5-year lock-in is just the legal minimum; exiting at 5 years often means getting back less than what you put in.
Should I surrender my ULIP to buy a term plan instead?
It depends on how long you have held the ULIP. If you are past the lock-in period and the fund value is low, surrendering may make sense. But if you have been paying for 8-10 years, you have already absorbed most of the charges, and continuing might be more practical. Either way, buy a term plan first before surrendering any existing cover, so your family is never unprotected during the transition.
How do ULIP charges compare to mutual fund expense ratios?
ULIPs typically carry total charges of 2-4% per year (fund management + mortality + policy admin + premium allocation). Direct mutual funds have expense ratios of 0.5-1.5%. Over a 20-year period, this difference compounds significantly. For example, on a Rs 10 lakh corpus, a 2% annual charge difference can mean Rs 5-8 lakh less in your hands at maturity.
Can I convert my existing ULIP into a term insurance policy?
No. ULIPs and term insurance are fundamentally different products, and conversion between the two is not possible. If you want term coverage, you need to buy a separate term plan. You can then decide whether to continue, reduce, or surrender your ULIP based on its current fund value and your financial goals.
Separate Protection from Investment
For most Indians, the winning formula is simple:
- Buy term insurance for protection.
- Invest separately for growth.
- Consider ULIPs only if you’re disciplined, tax-conscious, and want bundled convenience.
Insurance should protect first. Investments should grow wealth first. Mixing the two often weakens both.
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Reviewed and Edited by
Andy Shatananda
Andy Shatananda is a Senior Account Director with over 13 years of experience in building brands through strategy, strong client partnerships, and outcome driven marketing. He specializes in translating complex business goals into clear, scalable digital solutions. At Quantent, he leads with a balance of commercial thinking and creative rigour, helping brands grow with clarity, consistency, and purpose.



