Burial & final expense rates · Updated May 2026
Burial Insurance Rates for 66-Year-Olds
A 66-year-old can get $10,000 of day-one burial coverage from about $43.20/mo (women) or $57.14/mo (men). See average monthly premiums per tier and coverage amount below.
At 66, rates are higher than they were in your 50s but still very workable. Most healthy applicants qualify for Day-One Coverage from at least one of the top three carriers. For example, $10,000 of Day-One Coverage runs about $43/mo for a healthy 66-year-old woman and $57/mo for a man. Every rate below is the average of the cheapest 2–4 carriers per tier in our quoting system for an applicant with no health conditions and a normal height and weight profile. Rates assume a TX resident, but rates are the same nationally. Your actual rate depends on your state, health, gender, tobacco use, and other lifestyle questions.
About the three tiers below
- Level (Day 1 coverage): Pays the full benefit from day one. Best price. Always requires answering health questions — but common conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol can still get day-one coverage and preferred rates.
- Graded (Partial benefit years 1–2): For applicants with moderate health issues. Pays a partial benefit in years 1–2, then the full benefit from year 3 on.
- Guaranteed Issue (2-year waiting period): For applicants with major health issues. During the first two years, you receive your premiums back plus up to 10%. After the two-year waiting period, it functions as a full policy.
Male Rates — Age 66
| Coverage | Level | Graded | Guaranteed Issue |
|---|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $32.27 $387/yr | $53.25 $639/yr | $47.77 $573/yr |
| $10,000 | $61.08 $733/yr | $102.00 $1224/yr | $93.32 $1120/yr |
| $15,000 | $89.89 $1079/yr | $150.74 $1809/yr | $139.38 $1673/yr |
| $20,000 | $118.71 $1425/yr | $199.49 $2394/yr | $185.69 $2228/yr |
| $25,000 | $143.65 $1724/yr | — | $231.99 $2784/yr |
| $30,000 | $171.68 $2060/yr | — | — |
| $35,000 | $206.99 $2484/yr | — | — |
| $40,000 | $238.61 $2863/yr | — | — |
| $45,000 | $280.72 $3369/yr | — | — |
| $50,000 | $308.19 $3698/yr | — | — |
Each cell shows the average monthly premium of the cheapest 2–4 carriers per tier in our quoting system for that coverage amount and tier. Non-Tobacco, age 66, male.
| Coverage | Level | Graded | Guaranteed Issue |
|---|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $43.07 $517/yr | $53.25 $639/yr | $47.77 $573/yr |
| $10,000 | $83.80 $1006/yr | $102.00 $1224/yr | $93.32 $1120/yr |
| $15,000 | $124.51 $1494/yr | $150.74 $1809/yr | $139.38 $1673/yr |
| $20,000 | $165.22 $1983/yr | $199.49 $2394/yr | $185.69 $2228/yr |
| $25,000 | $207.18 $2486/yr | — | $231.99 $2784/yr |
| $30,000 | $247.81 $2974/yr | — | — |
| $35,000 | $288.47 $3462/yr | — | — |
| $40,000 | $329.11 $3949/yr | — | — |
| $45,000 | $409.46 $4914/yr | — | — |
| $50,000 | $450.24 $5403/yr | — | — |
Each cell shows the average monthly premium of the cheapest 2–4 carriers per tier in our quoting system for that coverage amount and tier. Tobacco User, age 66, male.
Female Rates — Age 66
| Coverage | Level | Graded | Guaranteed Issue |
|---|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $25.02 $300/yr | $40.33 $484/yr | $35.06 $421/yr |
| $10,000 | $46.60 $559/yr | $76.16 $914/yr | $67.91 $815/yr |
| $15,000 | $68.17 $818/yr | $112.00 $1344/yr | $101.26 $1215/yr |
| $20,000 | $89.74 $1077/yr | $147.83 $1774/yr | $134.86 $1618/yr |
| $25,000 | $107.38 $1289/yr | — | $168.46 $2022/yr |
| $30,000 | $128.17 $1538/yr | — | — |
| $35,000 | $157.30 $1888/yr | — | — |
| $40,000 | $180.19 $2162/yr | — | — |
| $45,000 | $215.40 $2585/yr | — | — |
| $50,000 | $236.36 $2836/yr | — | — |
Each cell shows the average monthly premium of the cheapest 2–4 carriers per tier in our quoting system for that coverage amount and tier. Non-Tobacco, age 66, female.
| Coverage | Level | Graded | Guaranteed Issue |
|---|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $32.58 $391/yr | $40.33 $484/yr | $35.06 $421/yr |
| $10,000 | $62.80 $754/yr | $76.16 $914/yr | $67.91 $815/yr |
| $15,000 | $92.99 $1116/yr | $112.00 $1344/yr | $101.26 $1215/yr |
| $20,000 | $122.70 $1472/yr | $147.83 $1774/yr | $134.86 $1618/yr |
| $25,000 | $148.17 $1778/yr | — | $168.46 $2022/yr |
| $30,000 | $176.99 $2124/yr | — | — |
| $35,000 | $205.85 $2470/yr | — | — |
| $40,000 | $234.69 $2816/yr | — | — |
| $45,000 | $287.93 $3455/yr | — | — |
| $50,000 | $316.45 $3797/yr | — | — |
Each cell shows the average monthly premium of the cheapest 2–4 carriers per tier in our quoting system for that coverage amount and tier. Tobacco User, age 66, female.
How these rates were calculated
Each rate on this page is the average of the cheapest 2–4 carriers per tier in our quoting system for that combination of tier, coverage amount, age, gender, and tobacco status. Level (Day 1) has the deepest panel; Graded and Guaranteed Issue draw from fewer carriers per cell. We publish the aggregate index rather than individual carrier names because the cheapest carrier varies based on your individual situation — health profile, age, and state. The number on the page is an aggregated reference; the carrier that actually wins for you depends on what you tell the underwriter. Rates assume a TX resident, but rates are the same nationally.
Your actual rate depends on your state, health, gender, tobacco use, and other lifestyle questions. "No medical exam" means no doctor visit, no blood draw, and no urine sample — but every application includes an electronic check of pharmacy records, the MIB (an industry medical-information clearinghouse), and sometimes the MVR (motor-vehicle record).
Want a personalized quote that accounts for your health and state?
Get a personalized quote →or call 512-649-7977 to connect with a broker.
Common questions about burial insurance at 66
What's the difference between Level, Graded, and Guaranteed Issue?
These are the three tiers shown in the tables above. Level (Day-One Coverage) pays the full benefit from the day the policy is in force — best price, but you'll answer a short health questionnaire. Graded pays a partial benefit if you die in years 1–2 (typically 30% year 1, 70% year 2), then full benefit from year 3 on — for applicants with moderate health issues. Guaranteed Issue has no health questions, anyone qualifies, but the cost is highest and there's a 2-year waiting period for natural-cause death.
Will I need a medical exam?
No. "No medical exam" means no doctor visit, no blood draw, and no urine sample. The underwriting decision is made from your answers to a few health questions plus an electronic check of your pharmacy records, the MIB (an industry medical-information clearinghouse), and sometimes the MVR (motor-vehicle record). Most applications are decided in minutes, not weeks.
How much coverage do I actually need?
The typical American funeral runs $9,000–$15,000 (NFDA, 2024). Add unpaid medical bills, small debts, and a buffer for the family and most people land at $15,000–$25,000. Buying more than $50,000 of burial insurance is unusual — at that level, term life or a small whole life policy is typically a better fit.
How much does $10,000 of burial insurance cost at 66?
At 66, a healthy non-tobacco woman typically pays about $43/mo and a healthy non-tobacco man pays about $57/mo for $10,000 of Day-One Coverage. Coverage scales close to linearly with face amount — $20,000 runs about $83/mo (women) or $111/mo (men). Tobacco use roughly doubles the price; well-controlled common conditions (diabetes, high blood pressure, COPD) usually still qualify for Day-One Coverage.
Burial insurance vs life insurance — what's the difference?
Burial insurance IS life insurance — it's a small whole-life policy ($5,000–$50,000) sold under a different name to people who specifically want to cover funeral and end-of-life costs. The differences vs a typical term or large whole-life policy: smaller face amounts, simplified underwriting (no medical exam), level premiums for life, and a lump-sum benefit paid to whoever you name. If you need $250,000 to replace income for a young family, you want term life. If you want $10,000–$25,000 earmarked for final expenses, this is the right product.
How much will Social Security pay for my funeral?
$255. That's the one-time lump-sum death benefit Social Security pays to a surviving spouse or eligible dependent — and the amount has not been raised since 1954. The average U.S. funeral runs $9,000–$15,000 (NFDA, 2024). The gap between what Social Security pays and what families actually spend is exactly what these rate tables are sized to fill.
Will my monthly premium go up over time?
No. Every policy in the table above is whole life — your monthly premium is locked in the day the policy is issued and never increases as you age. To put a number on it: lock in $10,000 of Day-One Coverage at 66 today and you'll pay about $57/mo (men) or $43/mo (women) for the rest of your life — that rate doesn't change at 71, 76, or beyond. The death benefit also doesn't decrease. This differs from term life (cheaper per dollar but expires) and from many "senior" TV mailers that quietly raise the rate every five years.
Can I qualify with diabetes, COPD, or a heart condition?
While all of these things are complicated, many people with diabetes, COPD and past heart issues can and do get day 1 coverage and level rates.
Does burial insurance cover cremation?
Yes. The death benefit is paid in cash and your beneficiary can spend it on any final-expense need — burial, cremation, direct cremation, a memorial service, or none of the above. There's no requirement that it be spent on a funeral at all. Cremation typically runs $1,000–$3,500 (vs $9,000–$15,000 for traditional burial), so a smaller policy often makes sense — at 66, $5,000 of Day-One Coverage runs about $23/mo (women) or $30/mo (men).
How do I know which carrier is cheapest for me at 66?
Pricing varies by state, gender, tobacco status, and any health history. The table above shows the average of the cheapest carriers per tier across the panel — but the specific carrier that wins for you depends on your individual answers. To find the carrier that actually prices your situation best, run the quote on this page or call (512) 649-7977 and a broker will shop the panel against your real answers.
How much does Graded coverage cost vs. Level?
Graded coverage typically runs 30–60% more than Level, because the carrier is taking on additional risk by issuing despite health concerns. To put it in context: at 66, $10K Level coverage runs about $57/mo for men, vs. $102/mo for Graded — about 179% of the Level price.
What's the 2-year waiting period?
On Graded and Guaranteed Issue policies, if the insured dies of natural causes during the first 24 months, the carrier returns premiums paid (with some interest, or pays a partial benefit) instead of the full death benefit. Accidental death is fully covered from day one on every tier. Day-One Coverage (Level) has no waiting period.
