Life insurance for warehouse workers and logistics staff
Warehouse and logistics workers form the backbone of the UK supply chain. Life insurance is particularly important for those with mortgages and dependants, ensuring family finances are protected in the event of death.
How much does life insurance cost for warehouse workers and logistics staff?
Premiums are based primarily on age, health, and smoking status — not occupation for most standard roles. Warehouse workers may be assessed as a slightly higher occupational class due to manual handling, but most insurers offer standard rates. A healthy non-smoking 35-year-old warehouse worker can typically get £200,000 of level term cover for £12–£22/month.
How much life insurance do warehouse workers and logistics staff need?
A common starting point is 10 times annual salary, plus enough to cover your outstanding mortgage. Consider:
- Your mortgage balance
- Number of dependants and how long they'd need financial support
- Any outstanding debts
- Whether a partner works and what their income would cover
Should warehouse workers and logistics staff also get income protection?
Yes — life insurance only pays on death. Income protection covers you if illness or injury prevents you from working while you're alive. For many warehouse workers and logistics staff, income protection is arguably more important, as you're much more likely to be unable to work than to die during your working years.
Writing your policy in trust
Always consider writing your life insurance in trust. This ensures the payout reaches your beneficiaries quickly, without going through probate, and outside your estate (avoiding inheritance tax). It's free to set up and takes around 30 minutes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Warehouse workers may be assessed as a slightly higher occupational class due to manual handling, but most insurers offer standard rates. For most warehouse workers and logistics staff, occupation has little impact on life insurance premiums, which are primarily driven by age, health, and smoking status.
Yes — always disclose your occupation accurately. Some high-risk occupations (military, offshore workers, certain manual roles) may affect premiums or exclusions.
Most people choose a term that lasts until their mortgage is paid off and their children are financially independent — typically 20–30 years.