Insurance Needs Calculator

Use the industry-standard DIME method to calculate exactly how much insurance your family needs. This approach accounts for all four pillars of financial protection: Debt, Income replacement, Mortgage payoff, and Education funding for your dependents.

Household Income

Debts & Obligations

DIME Analysis Results

$830,000.00 Total Insurance Needed (DIME Method)
D - Debt (Non-Mortgage)$30,000.00
I - Income Replacement (10 yrs)$400,000.00
M - Mortgage Payoff$250,000.00
E - Education (2 dependents)$100,000.00
Additional Savings Goals$50,000.00
Existing Coverage$100,000.00
Coverage Gap$730,000.00
Current Coverage Ratio12.0%
Income Multiple Needed10.4x

EDUCATION

Understanding the DIME Method

The DIME method is one of the most widely used frameworks for calculating life insurance needs. It stands for Debt, Income, Mortgage, and Education, the four primary financial categories that your insurance should cover. Unlike simple rules of thumb that suggest buying ten times your salary, the DIME method provides a detailed, personalized calculation that accounts for your specific financial situation, family composition, and long-term obligations.

Each component of DIME serves a distinct purpose. The Debt component ensures that all non-mortgage liabilities are paid off, preventing your family from inheriting your financial obligations. The Income component replaces the earnings gap between you and your spouse for a period of time, typically ten years, giving your family time to adjust. The Mortgage component pays off the home so your family can stay without the burden of monthly payments. The Education component funds college or other educational goals for each dependent child, currently estimated at around $50,000 per child for a public university education.

The strength of the DIME method is that it makes the abstract concept of insurance needs concrete and actionable. By breaking the total into specific categories, you can see exactly where your money is going and make informed decisions about what to prioritize. For example, if your mortgage is nearly paid off, that component shrinks. If your children are close to college age, you may have already saved for education. The method also highlights the importance of subtracting existing coverage, since many people already have some group life insurance through their employer that partially fills the gap.

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