How much coverage Illinois parents actually need
State Farm Life is headquartered in Bloomington — meaning Illinois residents can often walk into a captive agent's office for life insurance, a coverage path that has nearly disappeared elsewhere.
Run the DIME calculation: Debt + Income replacement (10 years × $78,433) + Mortgage + Education ($25K–$100K per child). For a Illinois family at median income with a $300K mortgage and two kids planning to attend an in-state university, that math lands at roughly $1.1M–$1.4M of coverage per working parent.
Non-working or part-time parents need coverage too — typically $250K–$500K to cover childcare, household services, and lost future earning capacity.
Why 20-year term is the parent default
If your youngest child is 2 years old today, you need coverage that lasts at least 20 years (until they finish college). 30-year term costs roughly 1.5x more than 20-year — worth it only if your youngest is a newborn and you want coverage through their early career.
Avoid 10-year term as a parent. The premium savings are minimal, and you'll be re-shopping in your 40s when health may have changed.
- Youngest child 0–2: choose 30-year term
- Youngest child 3–5: choose 25- or 30-year term
- Youngest child 6+: choose 20-year term
- Both parents working: equal coverage on both
- Single-income household: 1.3x coverage on income earner
Top carriers Illinois parents choose
For healthy IL parents aged 28–45 looking for $500K–$1.5M of 20- or 30-year term, four carriers consistently win on rate: State Farm Life (Bloomington, IL), COUNTRY Financial, Allstate Life Re-issued blocks, Mutual of Omaha. All four offer accelerated underwriting (no exam) for clean applicants.
Sample Illinois parent rates (age 35 non-smoker, $1M 20-year term): male approximately $32–$52/month, female approximately $26–$42/month. Add $25 more per month to step up to $1.25M.