How Much Does Key Man Life Insurance Cost in Texas?

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How Much Does Key Man Life Insurance Cost in Texas?

Real cost ranges, tax rules, and coverage calculations for Texas business owners protecting their most valuable people.

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Leroy Wilkerson
Owner / Agent

If your business depends heavily on one or two people, you have probably asked yourself: what happens if that person is suddenly gone?

That question is exactly what key man life insurance is designed to answer.

The short answer on cost: most Texas small businesses pay between $100 and $600 per month for key man coverage. The range is wide because the premium is built around who you are insuring and how much protection your business needs.

At Wilkerson Insurance Agency in Farmers Branch, TX, we have had this conversation with business owners across the DFW Metroplex for over 15 years. The question is almost always the same: “Is this going to cost a fortune, or is it actually manageable?”

For most healthy individuals under 55, it is more affordable than you would expect.

A study found that following a founding entrepreneur’s death, approximately 60% of a business’s sales are lost. That number alone makes the case for key man coverage.

Business succession research

By the end of this guide, you will know what drives your premium up or down, real cost ranges by age and coverage amount, the difference between term and permanent key man policies, how the IRS treats premiums and the death benefit, and how to calculate the right coverage amount for your business.

What Factors Determine the Cost of Key Man Life Insurance in Texas?

The price is not a flat rate. Every quote is built from scratch based on the person being insured and the policy structure you choose.

Age

The biggest driver. A 35-year-old in good health pays a fraction of what a 55-year-old pays for the same coverage.

Health Status

Medical underwriting evaluates blood pressure, weight, cholesterol, and illness history. Preferred rates run 20%–40% lower.

Gender

Women statistically live longer, so coverage on a female key person typically costs slightly less than for a male.

Coverage Amount

A $1M policy costs more than a $500K policy. Use a life insurance calculator to estimate.

Policy Type

Term life is significantly less expensive than permanent life. Most Texas businesses use term for key man purposes.

Industry and occupation also factor in. A commercial pilot or construction site manager will generally face higher premiums than someone in an office-based role, even at the same age and health status.

What Are the Real Cost Ranges for Key Man Life Insurance?

The table below gives you realistic planning ranges based on commonly purchased coverage. These are estimates for individuals in good health, not guaranteed quotes.

Key Person Age Coverage Amount Policy Type Est. Monthly Premium
35 $500,000 20-year term $45 – $80
35 $1,000,000 20-year term $85 – $150
45 $500,000 20-year term $100 – $180
45 $1,000,000 20-year term $190 – $340
55 $500,000 10-year term $180 – $320
55 Highest Range $1,000,000 10-year term $350 – $600

All figures are planning-range estimates only.

For broader context on what life insurance typically costs across different scenarios in Texas, see our full breakdown of life insurance costs in Texas.

We worked with a small manufacturing business in Dallas that needed key man coverage to close an SBA loan. The owner was 48 and in good health. We placed a $1,000,000, 10-year term policy for around $220 per month. The loan closed on time.

Wilkerson Insurance Agency — Client Case Study

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How Do You Calculate the Right Coverage Amount?

Before you move forward on pricing, you need to know the right coverage number. There are three methods most agents and financial advisors use. Pick the one that fits your business best.

01

Salary Multiplier

Multiply the key person’s annual compensation by the number of years to recover from their loss.

Example: $200K salary × 3 years = $600,000 coverage target
02

Revenue Contribution

Calculate the percentage of revenue this person drives and multiply by your estimated recovery period.

Example: 40% of $3M revenue × 2 years = $2,400,000 coverage target
03

Replacement Cost

Add recruiting fees (25%–50% of salary), productivity loss during onboarding (6–18 months), and revenue lost during transition.

Example: Mid-level key role total can reach $300K–$500K

Most experienced agents recommend running all three methods and using the highest result as your coverage floor, then adjusting based on what the business can afford in monthly premiums.

Term vs. Permanent: Which Policy Type Is Right for Your Business?

If you are feeling unsure about which policy type fits your situation, here is how we explain it to most clients.

Recommended for Most

Term Life Insurance

Covers a set period — typically 10, 15, or 20 years. Significantly less expensive than permanent life.

  • Lower monthly premiums
  • Covers the key person’s most productive years
  • Easy to adjust if the key person leaves
  • Simple and straightforward structure
For Retention & Asset Building

Permanent Life Insurance

Includes whole life and universal life. Costs 3–5× more but builds cash value over time.

  • Cash value the business can borrow against
  • Useful as a retention incentive
  • Can fund deferred compensation arrangements
  • Coverage never expires while premiums are paid

If your goal is pure financial protection in case of loss, term is almost always the better value. If employee retention or building a business asset is also part of the plan, permanent coverage is worth a closer look. Our guide on term vs. whole life insurance in Texas breaks down the full comparison.

Are Key Man Life Insurance Premiums Tax Deductible?

This is where most clients want a clear answer. Here it is: in most cases, no.

IRS Section 264(a)(1) does not allow businesses to deduct key man premiums because the business is both the policy owner and the beneficiary. Paying non-deductible premiums feels like a drawback until you look at the other side of the equation.

IRS Tax Treatment at a Glance

✕ Premiums — Not Deductible

Business cannot deduct key man premiums when it is both the policy owner and beneficiary. IRS Section 264(a)(1) applies.

✓ Death Benefit — Tax-Free

The death benefit is generally received by the business completely free of income tax, potentially reaching seven figures.

There is one important compliance step that protects that tax-free status. Before the policy is issued, you must provide written notice to the employee and obtain their written consent. You must also file IRS Form 8925 annually, listing each insured employee and their coverage amount. Skipping any of these steps can convert what should be a tax-free death benefit into a fully taxable one.

If your business is structured as a C corporation, there is an additional consideration: the death benefit may be included in the alternative minimum tax (AMT) calculation. Talk to your CPA before finalizing the policy if this applies to you.

Beyond key man coverage, Texas small business owners should also review available small business health insurance tax credits in Texas, which can offset other employee benefit costs.

Who Qualifies as a Key Person in a Texas Business?

There is no single IRS definition. The business makes that determination based on the financial impact of that person’s absence. In practice, key man policies in Texas are most often placed on:

  • Business owners and founding partners
  • Top revenue producers and senior salespeople
  • Technical experts whose knowledge cannot be replaced quickly
  • Executives who manage key banking relationships, vendor contracts, or major client accounts
  • Business partners, especially when a buy-sell agreement needs to be funded

If losing someone tomorrow would create a measurable and lasting financial impact, they qualify.

Beyond key man policies, many Texas business owners also protect their company’s financial stability through disability income plans, which cover the cost of a key person becoming unable to work due to illness or injury rather than death.

Need help identifying your key person coverage?

Our licensed Texas agents walk you through the full process.

Call 214-501-9613 →

Why Wilkerson Insurance Agency Is the Right Choice for Key Man Coverage in Texas

At Wilkerson Insurance Agency in Farmers Branch, we help Texas business owners secure affordable and properly structured key man life insurance. As an independent brokerage, we compare plans from multiple top carriers to find the best fit for your business needs and budget.

  • Independent brokerage: We shop rates across carriers such as North American, Transamerica, and Mutual of Omaha for competitive pricing and unbiased recommendations.
  • 15+ years of experience: LeRoy Wilkerson and our team have helped more than 2,000 Texas clients since 2010 with practical, real-world advice on key person coverage.
  • Free consultation: Get actual quotes and clear answers without any cost or pressure to buy.
  • IRS compliance guidance: We guide you through the required employee notice, written consent, and annual Form 8925 filing so your death benefit stays tax-free.
  • Statewide Texas service: Based in Farmers Branch, we serve businesses across DFW, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, and the rest of Texas.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does key man life insurance typically cost per month in Texas?+
Most Texas businesses pay between $100 and $600 per month depending on the key person’s age, health, and coverage amount. A 40-year-old in good health covered for $1,000,000 on a 20-year term might pay $150 to $250 per month. A 55-year-old at the same coverage level could pay $350 to $600 or more. For a broader look at how factors like age affect life insurance pricing in Texas, the Insurance Information Institute’s life insurance needs guide offers a helpful independent framework.
Are the premiums tax deductible?+
No, in most cases. The IRS does not allow businesses to deduct key man premiums when the business is the beneficiary. The trade-off is that the death benefit is typically received tax-free. You can review the official IRS guidance on employer-owned life insurance compliance, including IRS Form 8925 requirements, directly on the IRS website. Consult your CPA for guidance specific to your business structure.
Does the key person have to consent to the policy?+
Yes. Federal law requires written notice to the employee and written consent before the policy is issued. Without it, the death benefit may become taxable. Consent documentation must be included in your annual IRS Form 8925 filing.
Can a business insure more than one key person?+
Yes. Many Texas businesses carry separate policies on two or more key individuals. Each policy has its own premium, and all covered employees are reported together on Form 8925.
What happens to the policy if the key person leaves?+
With a term policy, the business can simply stop paying premiums and let the policy lapse. With a permanent policy, the business can surrender it for cash value or transfer ownership to the departing employee, though that transfer may create a tax liability for the employee.

Three Things to Remember Before You Move Forward

  1. For key people under 50 in good health, coverage is often more affordable than business owners expect.
  2. Getting the IRS requirements right from the start matters. Notice, consent, and Form 8925 filing are not optional.
  3. The right coverage amount depends on your specific business. The estimator in this article gives you a starting point, but an actual quote requires underwriting.

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LeRoy Wilkerson

LeRoy Wilkerson is the founder of Wilkerson Insurance Agency, an independent health insurance agency serving the
Dallas - Fort Worth community since 2010. He leads with a simple philosophy: educate first, advocate always. Every client starts with a discovery consultation so LeRoy can understand their goals, budget, and coverage needs, then he helps them
navigate plans and benefits - truly "Taking the Hell out of Health Insurance."

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