Updated March 2026

Life Insurance in Your 50s Canada 2026

Life insurance in your 50s is more expensive but still entirely attainable for most Canadians. Whether you're covering a remaining mortgage, protecting a spouse's retirement income, or using life insurance as an estate planning tool, this decade requires a more strategic approach. This guide walks through realistic costs, available options including term, permanent, and no-medical policies, and how Canadians aged 50–59 can get the coverage they need.

Why Do Canadians in Their 50s Still Need Life Insurance?

A common misconception is that life insurance needs disappear once children grow up. In reality, many Canadians in their 50s carry significant financial obligations:

Life Insurance Options in Your 50s

Term Life Insurance (10 or 20 Year)

Term coverage remains available in your 50s, though at higher premiums. A 10-year term takes a 55-year-old to 65 — spanning peak mortgage and income years. A 20-year term from age 50 extends to 70, providing coverage well into retirement. Premiums are substantial but manageable for many.

Permanent Life Insurance

Whole life and universal life policies become more relevant in your 50s for those focused on estate planning, business succession, or leaving a tax-free inheritance. The death benefit is guaranteed regardless of when you die, making it useful for estate equalization and covering final tax liabilities on RRSP/RRIF accounts.

No-Medical or Simplified Issue Life Insurance

If your health prevents qualification for fully underwritten coverage, simplified issue (few health questions, no exam) and guaranteed issue (no health questions at all) policies are available. Coverage is typically capped at $25K–$500K and premiums are higher, but these options ensure you can still get coverage. See our no-medical life insurance guide.

Life Insurance Affordability Calculator — 50s

Sample Premiums — 50s, Non-Smoker, Standard Health (2026)

Age$250K / 10yr$500K / 10yr$500K / 20yr$1M / 20yr
50~$55/mo~$105/mo~$155/mo~$300/mo
53~$70/mo~$135/mo~$200/mo~$390/mo
55~$85/mo~$165/mo~$250/mo~$490/mo
58~$110/mo~$215/mo~$330/mo~$650/mo

Estate Planning Uses of Life Insurance at 50+

One of the most powerful uses of life insurance in your 50s is addressing the tax liability on registered accounts. When you die, your RRSP or RRIF is fully included in your income for the year — at the highest marginal rate. A $500,000 RRIF could generate $230,000+ in taxes. Life insurance can fund this liability, preserving the estate for heirs.

Permanent life insurance policies are especially suited here: the death benefit is paid tax-free, bypasses probate when a named beneficiary is designated, and the payout is timed to when the tax liability arises (at death).

50s Strategy: If you converted a term policy to permanent coverage in your 40s (using the conversion privilege), review the policy performance now. Participating whole life policies should be reviewed for dividend accumulation. Universal life investment accounts should be aligned with your risk tolerance as retirement approaches.

Common Health Conditions and Life Insurance Eligibility at 50+

Many Canadians in their 50s manage one or more chronic conditions. These don't necessarily disqualify you:

Using a Broker vs Buying Direct in Your 50s

In your 50s, a licensed broker is even more valuable than earlier in life. Brokers know which insurers are most favorable for specific health profiles — some companies are more lenient with well-controlled diabetes, others with cardiac history. Getting declined by one insurer doesn't mean you're uninsurable; it means you need a broker who knows the market. Our guide on broker vs direct insurance covers this in detail.

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