Life Insurance vs Health Insurance — You Need Both, and Here's Why That's Not a Close Call

People ask Policywings this question fairly regularly: "Should I get life insurance or health insurance first?"
The question has a hidden assumption baked in — that these two things are competing for the same budget, protecting against similar risks, and one might reasonably substitute for the other.
They don't. They protect against completely different things. Choosing between them makes about as much sense as choosing whether to insure your car against theft or against accidents. Two different risks. Both real.
What Life Insurance Is Actually For
Life insurance exists for one reason: if you die during your working years, your dependents don't lose their financial footing.
That's it. The sum assured goes to your nominee — your spouse, your parents, your children — as a lump sum when you die. They invest it, draw income from it, pay off the home loan with part of it, fund the children's education with another part. The financial structure your salary was holding up keeps standing after you're gone.
Life insurance does nothing for you while you're alive. You don't get returns. You don't get cashback. With a pure term plan, you pay premiums for 30 years, survive the term, and the policy ends. That's the deal — and it's the correct deal. Insurance is not an investment. It's protection against a specific risk.
What Health Insurance Is Actually For
Health insurance protects against a completely different problem: the cost of getting sick or injured while you're alive.
Hospitalization in a decent Noida private hospital is expensive. A cardiac angioplasty runs ₹5–8 lakh. A week in ICU after a serious accident: ₹1–2 lakh. Cancer treatment across chemotherapy and radiation rounds: ₹15–30 lakh or more over the treatment period.
Without health insurance, these costs come straight from savings. For most families, one serious illness event can eliminate years of financial progress in a matter of weeks.
What Happens With Only Life Insurance
Your family is protected if you die. Good.
But if you're hospitalized — which is statistically far more likely for a 35-year-old than dying is — you're uncovered. Every rupee of the bill comes from your pocket. And serious illness can both cost you heavily and cut your income at the same time.
There's also the waiting period issue. Health insurance has them. If you buy health insurance after a condition develops — diabetes, hypertension, a cardiac history — you're facing 2–3 years before that condition is covered. The right time to buy health insurance is before you need it. Not after a diagnosis.
What Happens With Only Health Insurance
Your hospitalizations are covered. Your family survives medical events without financial ruin.
But if you die — in a road accident, from a cardiac event, from anything — there's no payout. Your spouse's income, which was supplementary to yours, now has to carry everything. The home loan that took both incomes to service is now a problem. Your children's school fees don't pause.
Health insurance is very good at exactly what it does. It is completely useless for income replacement after death.
If Budget Is Genuinely Tight: How to Sequence
Most earning adults in Noida need both. If you have to choose an order:
Buy term insurance first if you have financial dependents. It's genuinely cheap — a 30-year-old gets ₹1 crore of coverage for approximately ₹15,000/year. If you die without it, the consequences for your family are permanent.
Buy health insurance next — not next year, not when you "have more money," but within weeks. The combination of both costs ₹35,000–50,000 annually for most Noida families. That's roughly ₹3,000–4,000 per month for comprehensive protection against both major risks. For a dual-income NCR household, that's manageable.
A Few Things People Say That Aren't Accurate
"My employer covers both." Employer group cover ends when employment ends. Group term life is usually 2–3x salary — not the 10–15x that's actually needed. Neither is portable. Neither should be your primary protection.
"I'm young, I'll sort it later." Later is when premiums are higher and pre-existing conditions have developed. Young and healthy is the exact right time to buy both, not a reason to delay.
"LIC handles everything." LIC primarily sells life insurance. Traditional LIC endowment policies provide modest coverage for high premiums. And they don't cover the health side at all.
Where to Start
A 33-year-old in Noida with a ₹15 lakh salary, a ₹40 lakh home loan, a spouse, and one child needs roughly:
Term insurance at ₹1.5–2 crore: approximately ₹16,000–22,000/year.
Family floater health at ₹20–25 lakh: approximately ₹18,000–28,000/year.
Total: ₹34,000–50,000. Both gaps closed. Both major risks covered.
For a conversation about what your specific numbers look like, call Policywings at +91-98111-67809.
Policywings Insurance Broking Pvt. Ltd. | IRDAI License No. DB 835 | A-57, 5th Floor, Sector-136, Noida | +91-98111-67809












