How diabetic underwriting actually works in North Carolina
Lincoln Financial's life insurance operations are headquartered in Greensboro, NC — the state has one of the largest concentrations of in-state underwriters in the country.
North Carolina carriers underwrite diabetes on three primary factors: type (T1 vs T2), control (most recent A1C), and complications (neuropathy, retinopathy, kidney involvement). Carriers also look at age of onset — T2 diagnosed after 50 is rated more leniently than T2 diagnosed in your 30s.
Insulin use, contrary to popular belief, does not automatically push you to Table-rated pricing. What matters is whether your numbers are controlled and whether you've had complications.
Which NC carriers are diabetic-friendly
Not all carriers treat diabetes the same. For North Carolina applicants, the most diabetic-friendly carriers in 2026 are:
- Prudential — best for T1 applicants and complex cases
- John Hancock — Vitality program can lower rates over time for healthy behavior
- Pacific Life — competitive Standard Plus pricing for controlled T2
- Mutual of Omaha — flexible on insulin-dependent applicants over 50
- Banner Life — competitive standard-class pricing for clean T2 cases
Realistic North Carolina diabetic rates (2026)
For a 45-year-old NC non-smoker with well-controlled type 2 diabetes (A1C 6.4, no complications), $500K of 20-year term averages $58–$95/month — roughly 1.4x the standard non-smoker rate of $25/month at age 35.
For type 1 diabetics under 40 with clean control: expect Table 2–Table 4 ratings, translating to $85–$165/month for the same $500K 20-year term in North Carolina. Above age 50 with T1, several major carriers will decline — but Prudential and Mutual of Omaha usually offer a rated policy.