
There is a persistent belief in Indian personal finance circles that the earlier you buy term insurance, the better. And in many cases, that is true: premiums are lower when you are young and healthy. But “earlier is always better” is an oversimplification that ignores a basic principle: term insurance exists to protect financial dependents. If you do not have financial dependents, you are buying a solution for a problem that does not yet exist.
This article is for people in their early 20s who are being pushed to buy term insurance before they have dependents, loans, or significant financial obligations. Buying too early is not a disaster, but it is a misallocation of limited financial resources at a stage when other priorities matter more.
TL;DR
- Term insurance protects dependents. If nobody depends on your income, the policy protects nobody.
- In your early 20s, an emergency fund, health insurance, and investments should take priority over term insurance.
- The premium savings from buying at 22 vs 28 are modest (roughly ₹1,000-1,500/year for ₹1 crore cover).
- Exception: If you have dependents, loans, or a family history of health issues at any age, buy immediately.
- The real risk of waiting is health deterioration, not premium increases.
What Should Come Before Term Insurance in Your 20s
If you are 22-25, just starting your career, and have no dependents, here is a more effective order of financial priorities:
| Priority | What It Does | Why It Comes First |
| 1. Emergency fund (3-6 months expenses) | Covers job loss, medical emergencies, unexpected expenses | Protects you right now; term insurance only pays at death |
| 2. Health insurance (₹5-10 lakh) | Covers hospitalization, surgeries, and medical costs | You are far more likely to be hospitalized than to die in your 20s |
| 3. Investments (SIP, PPF, index funds) | Builds long-term wealth and compounds over decades | Starting early gives you the maximum compounding advantage |
| 4. Term insurance | Replaces your income if you die | Only relevant when someone depends on your income |
This does not mean term insurance is unimportant. It means the timing should match your life stage. A 22-year-old with no loans and no dependents gets more value from a ₹5 lakh health insurance policy (which they will actually use) than a ₹1 crore term insurance policy (which nobody would claim if they died).
The Opportunity Cost of Early Premiums
Term insurance premiums at 22-25 are not expensive in absolute terms: ₹5,000-7,000/year for ₹1 crore cover. But for someone earning ₹3-5 lakh/year (a common starting salary), that represents 1-2% of gross income going toward a policy that has no current purpose.
If that ₹6,000/year were invested in an index fund earning 12% average returns instead:
- After 5 years: approximately ₹40,000
- After 10 years: approximately ₹1.15 lakh
- After 20 years: approximately ₹4.8 lakh
These are not life-changing amounts individually, but at the start of your career, every rupee directed toward wealth building has decades to compound. Premiums paid for unused protection do not compound at all.
When You SHOULD Buy Early (Regardless of Dependents)
There are situations where buying term insurance in your early 20s is the right call even without dependents:
1. Family history of serious health conditions
If diabetes, heart disease, or cancer runs in your family, your own risk of developing these conditions increases as you age. A diagnosis at 27 could mean premium loading of 25-50%, exclusions, or outright rejection. Buying at 22 while you are healthy locks in standard rates permanently.
2. You already have financial dependents
Some 22-year-olds support aging parents, fund a sibling’s education, or have taken an education loan that a parent co-signed. If your death would create a financial burden for anyone, the need exists now.
3. You have significant debt
An education loan of ₹10-20 lakh co-signed by a parent means that parent is liable if you die. A term insurance policy equal to the loan amount protects the co-signer.
4. You are a smoker or have a risky occupation
Smoker premiums are already 50-100% higher than non-smoker rates. They will only increase with age. If you smoke and plan to continue, buying early minimizes the cumulative cost. Similarly, certain occupations (mining, offshore work, aviation) carry loaded premiums that increase with age.
The Premium Difference: 22 vs 28
The strongest argument for early purchase is the premium lock-in. Let us look at what the actual difference is:
| Purchase Age | Annual Premium (₹1 Cr, 30-year term) | Total Premiums Over Policy Life |
| 22 | ₹5,500-6,500 | ₹1.65-1.95 lakh |
| 25 | ₹6,000-7,000 | ₹1.80-2.10 lakh |
| 28 | ₹6,800-8,000 | ₹2.04-2.40 lakh |
| 30 | ₹7,500-9,000 | ₹2.25-2.70 lakh |
The difference between buying at 22 and 28 is approximately ₹1,300-1,500/year, or ₹39,000-45,000 over a 30-year policy life. That is a real but modest saving. It is not significant enough to justify buying protection you do not need, especially when that money could be building your emergency fund or health insurance instead.
The Real Risk of Waiting: Health, Not Premiums
The biggest risk of delaying term insurance is not higher premiums; it is the possibility that your health changes between now and when you actually need coverage. Premiums increase predictably with age. Health deterioration is unpredictable and can make you uninsurable.
If you develop type 2 diabetes at 26, your premiums at 28 could be 30-50% higher than standard rates. If you are diagnosed with a heart condition, you might face exclusions or rejection. This risk is impossible to quantify in advance, which is why the standard advice leans toward buying early “just in case.”
The counterargument: if you are healthy at 22, the probability of a serious health diagnosis before 28-30 is statistically low (though not zero). For most healthy young Indians, the risk of health deterioration in a 5-6 year window is small enough to justify directing those premiums toward higher-priority financial goals.
A Practical Middle Ground
If you are in your early 20s with no dependents but want to hedge against future health risk:
- Buy a small base policy (₹25-50 lakh) now. This costs ₹2,000-3,500/year and locks in your insurability. If your health changes, you still have a base layer of cover.
- Top up with a larger policy when responsibilities arrive. When you get married, take a loan, or have a child, buy a second policy of ₹75 lakh to ₹1.5 crore to match your actual obligations.
- Prioritize health insurance and emergency fund first. These protect you (not a hypothetical nominee) against far more likely events.
Case Study: Aarav’s Decision at 23
Aarav, 23, just started his first job earning ₹4.5 lakh/year. He is single, lives with parents (who are financially independent), and has a ₹4 lakh education loan (no co-signer; taken from a bank against his own future income). A colleague suggests he buy a ₹1 crore term insurance policy.
Aarav’s analysis: he has no dependents. His parents do not rely on his income. His education loan has no co-signer, so it would be written off (not transferred) if he died. There is nobody who would face financial hardship from his death.
Instead, Aarav allocates his money as follows: ₹3,000/month to an emergency fund (targets 3 months expenses by year-end), ₹5,000/year on a ₹5 lakh health insurance policy, and ₹5,000/month to an index fund SIP. He plans to buy term insurance when he gets married or takes a home loan, whichever comes first.
Two years later, at 25, Aarav gets engaged. He buys a ₹1 crore term insurance policy at ₹6,200/year. His premium is slightly higher than it would have been at 23 (₹5,700), but his two years of invested SIPs are now worth ₹1.3 lakh, and he has a healthy emergency fund. His coverage now has a clear purpose: protecting his future wife and family.
FAQs
Is there an ideal age to buy term insurance?
The ideal age is when you first have someone who depends on your income. For most people, this is between 25-32. If you have dependents at 22, buy at 22. If you are 28 with no dependents and no loans, there is no urgency, but reassess annually as your life changes.
Can I invest the money instead of buying insurance?
Yes, but only if the alternative investment serves a more immediate need (emergency fund, health insurance, debt repayment). Do not skip term insurance to invest in stocks for fun. The comparison should be between term insurance premiums and other essential financial building blocks.
What if I develop a health condition before I buy?
This is the main risk of waiting. If you are diagnosed with a chronic condition, your premiums will be higher (sometimes significantly), or you may face exclusions or rejection. If your family has a history of early-onset health conditions, buying early is the safer choice even without dependents.
Is it a mistake to buy at 22 if I have no dependents?
It is not a mistake; it is just not the most efficient use of money. The policy does no harm, and the premiums are low. But those same premiums could be doing more work elsewhere in your financial plan. The “mistake” framing is about opportunity cost, not actual financial damage.
Should I buy a small policy now and top up later?
Yes, this is a sensible middle ground. A ₹25-50 lakh policy at 22-23 costs very little and locks in your health status. Top up with a larger policy when your responsibilities arrive. This gives you both a safety net and efficient use of money.
When to Buy, and When to Wait
Buying term insurance too early is not a financial catastrophe, but it is a misalignment of priorities. In your early 20s, your limited income is better deployed on an emergency fund, health insurance, and investments that compound over decades. Term insurance should enter the picture when you have dependents, loans, or financial obligations that would burden someone else if you died. The premium difference between 22 and 28 is modest; the compounding advantage of investing those premiums early is not. Buy when the need is real, and prioritize financial foundations first.
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Reviewed and Edited by
Hardik Lashkari
Hardik Lashkari is a Chartered Accountant and finance content specialist with over six years of experience writing for fintech and financial services brands. He specialises in translating complex financial topics into clear, credible content — from insurance and taxation to investing and personal finance. At Gyansurance, Hardik covers the how-to side of term insurance: buying guides, policy maintenance, digital underwriting, and the fine print buyers often miss.



