Why Do Architects Need Life Insurance?
As a architect, your income supports your family’s daily life – mortgage, bills, childcare, future plans. If you were to die, that income stops immediately. Life insurance provides a lump sum or regular payments to keep your family financially secure.
Architecture is a standard-risk profession for life insurance. Whether you work in practice, for a developer, or run your own firm, your occupation will not affect your premiums.
How Insurers Assess Architects
All architectural roles are standard risk. Site visits do not change the classification.
When applying, you will be asked about your exact job title and daily duties, whether you work at height or with hazardous materials, your health, smoking status, and the amount and term of cover you need.
How Much Cover Do Architects Need?
- Income replacement: 10–15 times your annual salary
- Mortgage: Enough to clear your outstanding balance
- Childcare & education: Until your youngest is independent
- Debts: Personal loans, credit cards, car finance
Types of Cover to Consider
| Type | Best For | Starting Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Level term | Family income replacement | From £8/mo |
| Decreasing term | Repayment mortgage | 30–50% cheaper |
| Family income benefit | Monthly income for family | Often cheapest per £ |
| Critical illness cover | Lump sum on serious illness | Approx. 2x life-only |
Should Architects Also Get Income Protection?
Yes. Life insurance covers death, but income protection covers you if illness or injury stops you working. The risk of being unable to work is far higher than dying during your working years. Many advisers recommend both products together.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Standard risk, competitive premiums.
A healthy 30-year-old non-smoker: from £8/month for £200k cover.