Scottish Widows vs AIG Life for life insurance: two of the UK's major protection insurers, both FCA-authorised and both with strong track records. Here's how they compare on price, claims, features and underwriting, based on 2024 published data and our adviser panel's real application experience.
Scottish Widows vs AIG Life — at a glance
| Insurer | Min / Max age | Max cover | Max term | Claim-paid % | Premium from |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scottish Widows | 17 / 79 | £2 million | 50 years | 99.5% | £6/month from age 25 |
| AIG Life | 18 / 77 | £5 million | 50 years | 98.8% | £5/month from age 25 |
Claim-paid % figures are each insurer's latest published 2024 UK term protection figures for life insurance. Headline premium is indicative for a healthy non-smoker aged 25–30 at the lowest cover tier. Max cover figures reflect headline caps; both insurers may go higher case-by-case via their IFA panels.
Price: who's cheaper for life insurance?
For a healthy non-smoker aged 30 buying £250,000 of life insurance, our adviser panel sees the following pricing pattern in 2026:
- Scottish Widows: £6/month from age 25 — mid tier pricing. strong for mortgage customers, average for standalone
- AIG Life: £5/month from age 25 — low-mid tier pricing. competitive for over-50s and joint-life policies
On pure price, either — tie typically wins for straightforward applicants. But neither is the cheapest in the market for every profile — for diabetics, smokers, high-BMI or pre-existing mental health cases, the ranking can flip dramatically. That's the point of whole-of-market comparison rather than direct-to-insurer buying.
Claims performance
Claims-paid percentage is the single most important number in protection insurance. It's the regulated, audited statistic for how often each insurer pays when a claim is submitted.
- Scottish Widows: 99.5% of life insurance claims paid in 2024 (Scottish Widows Ltd).
- AIG Life: 98.8% of life insurance claims paid in 2024 (AIG Life Ltd).
On 2024 figures, Scottish Widows has the edge. That said, both exceed the UK industry average of ~98% for term life, ~91% for critical illness, and ~90% for income protection, so the realistic difference for you as an applicant is small. What matters more is giving a complete, accurate medical history at application — non-disclosure is the overwhelming reason claims are declined across the whole market.
Features & extras compared
Scottish Widows
Care assistance, wellbeing support, terminal illness cover, guaranteed insurability for mortgage and family events.
AIG Life
Smart health included free, wellbeing support, relationship support, real rewards discount scheme, flexible premium payment.
Verdict on features
For most applicants, the features matter as much as price. Scottish Widows's standout is its part of Lloyds Banking Group — strong for customers also holding Lloyds, Halifax or Bank of Scotland mortgages. AIG Life's standout is its YourLife Plan with free Smart Health (24/7 GP, second opinion, online fitness, mental health support, nutrition consults for whole household). Work out which of those you'll actually use — wearable integration with Vitality is worthless if you won't wear the tracker; Aviva's Digicare+ is worthless if you're already paying for private health support; Royal London's Helping Hand mutual benefits are only compelling if you value a mutual structure.
Underwriting: who'll accept you at a better rate?
Underwriting is where the headline price comparison breaks down. Every insurer has its own strengths and weaknesses on medical history and occupation:
- Scottish Widows: strong for mortgage customers, average for standalone.
- AIG Life: competitive for over-50s and joint-life policies.
If you have any health history — diabetes, cancer history, high blood pressure, BMI above 30, regular alcohol consumption, mental health treatment — the right insurer can halve your premium versus the wrong one. An FCA-authorised adviser does a pre-underwriting enquiry on both before submitting a full application, so you see the realistic price from both insurers rather than guessing.
Max cover and max term
Scottish Widows will write life insurance up to £2 million over 50 years, with entry between age 17 and 79. AIG Life will go to £5 million over 50 years, with entry between age 18 and 77. For most UK households, both caps are well beyond what you'd realistically need — unless you're covering a £1m+ mortgage or a £2m+ IHT-triggering estate, both are more than sufficient.
Who should pick Scottish Widows?
- You value part of Lloyds Banking Group — strong for customers also holding Lloyds, Halifax or Bank of Scotland mortgages.
- You fall into the profile where Scottish Widows's underwriting is competitive: strong for mortgage customers, average for standalone.
- You want to use Care Assistance.
- You're buying a long-term policy and want an insurer with a mainstream, well-known brand for future peace of mind.
Who should pick AIG Life?
- You value YourLife Plan with free Smart Health (24/7 GP, second opinion, online fitness, mental health support, nutrition consults for whole household).
- You fall into the profile where AIG Life's underwriting is competitive: competitive for over-50s and joint-life policies.
- You want to use Smart Health included free.
- You prioritise life insurance features over any other brand consideration.
How to actually choose
- Get a quote from both on exactly the same cover amount, term and deferred period (for IP). Our free comparison does this in one step.
- Check the claim-paid figures — 99.5% for Scottish Widows versus 98.8% for AIG Life on 2024 life insurance.
- Read the key feature document — the KFD for each policy spells out what's included and excluded.
- Do a full medical disclosure — honesty at application is the single biggest determinant of whether your claim pays.
- Write the policy in trust — both insurers offer free trust-writing; this keeps payouts outside your estate for IHT and outside of probate delay.
Frequently Asked Questions
For a healthy non-smoker, AIG Life is usually cheaper at the headline level. But the real answer depends on your health and occupation — any pre-existing condition or non-standard job can flip the ranking. The only reliable way to know is to get both quoted on exactly the same cover.
Scottish Widows paid 99.5% of life insurance claims in 2024; AIG Life paid 98.8%. Both comfortably exceed the UK industry average. The delta between them is small and most declined claims across the whole market come from non-disclosure at application rather than from insurer-specific strictness.
Yes. There's no limit on the number of UK life insurance policies you can hold, provided each policy's sum assured is reasonable relative to your financial circumstances. Splitting cover across two insurers can make sense for very high sums assured or for diversifying claims risk, though it usually costs more than consolidating with one.
Scottish Widows's headline difference is part of Lloyds Banking Group — strong for customers also holding Lloyds, Halifax or Bank of Scotland mortgages. AIG Life's headline difference is YourLife Plan with free Smart Health (24/7 GP, second opinion, online fitness, mental health support, nutrition consults for whole household). Price and claim-paid figures are close; the decision usually comes down to which set of non-price features matches how you'll actually use the policy.
Yes, but with a catch. You can cancel any UK protection policy at any time. The catch is that your health may have changed since the original application — if you've had any medical events, the new insurer will price them into the new premium. If your health is identical, switching is straightforward; if it's materially worse, you might be better off keeping the original policy.
Always compare. Both Scottish Widows and AIG Life sell direct, but the quotes you get direct are the same as (or slightly worse than) those available via an FCA-authorised adviser — and you only see one insurer's price. A whole-of-market comparison shows both side by side alongside every other major UK insurer, with no cost to you.