Haven Life
Haven Life is backed by MassMutual and operates fully online. I got a quote in under five minutes, applied in 20, and had an approval decision in three business days without a medical exam. The price wasn't the lowest, but the speed and simplicity were the best of the group. If you're under 50 and in good shape, this is the easiest path to term coverage.
I requested term life quotes from five major insurers, compared coverage, and dug into ratings to find which ones are worth a closer look.
I bought term life insurance for the first time last year, and the process taught me how much rates vary between companies for what looks like the same coverage. I requested quotes from five insurers for the same 30-year, term policy on a healthy 38-year-old non-smoker. Here’s what I found and how each company felt to deal with.
| Insurer | AM Best Rating | Quote Type | Best For |
| — | — | — | — |
| Haven Life | A++ (MassMutual backed) | Online instant | No-exam term |
| State Farm | A++ | Agent | Bundling with auto/home |
| Northwestern Mutual | A++ | Agent | Whole life and planning |
| Banner Life | A+ | Online or agent | Low term premiums |
| Pacific Life | A+ | Agent | Higher coverage amounts |
How we picked
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
Top picks compared
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Haven Life | A++ (MassMutual backed) | Check price | |
| State Farm | A++ | Check price | |
| Northwestern Mutual | A++ | Check price | |
| Banner Life | A+ | Check price | |
| Pacific Life | A+ | Check price |
Our picks up close
Haven Life
Haven Life is backed by MassMutual and operates fully online. I got a quote in under five minutes, applied in 20, and had an approval decision in three business days without a medical exam. The price wasn't the lowest, but the speed and simplicity were the best of the group. If you're under 50 and in good shape, this is the easiest path to term coverage.

State Farm
I have State Farm for auto and home, so I asked my agent for a quote. The rate came in higher than Haven Life or Banner, but bundling discounts brought it close to even. The benefit of going through a local agent is having someone to call when life changes; I appreciated that more after my second kid was born and I needed to increase coverage.
Northwestern Mutual
Northwestern Mutual is the priciest of the group on term, and they push whole life products harder than the others. I sat through a 90-minute agent meeting where the focus was on permanent insurance and investment overlap. For someone with estate-planning needs, this depth is valuable. For straightforward term coverage, you're paying for service you may not need.
Banner Life
Banner Life consistently came up as the lowest-priced term in my research, and my quote confirmed it. The application process required a medical exam, which added two weeks compared to Haven Life's no-exam path. The savings are real though; over a 30-year term I'd save thousands compared to the most expensive quote.

Pacific Life
Pacific Life offered the most flexibility for higher coverage amounts. I was quoted on a million policy as a comparison and the price was competitive at that level. Their agents were knowledgeable and didn't push permanent products as hard as Northwestern. Worth a quote if you need coverage above the standard online limits.
Before you buy
What to consider
Start by calculating how much coverage you need, then get quotes from at least three insurers for an identical policy. Always compare AM Best ratings; an A+ or better is the floor for trust. If you want speed and simplicity, Haven Life or another online insurer wins. If you have complex estate needs, work with an agent at a mutual company. Always read the conversion clause; many term policies let you convert to whole life later without a new medical exam, which is worth having even if you never use it. Finally, don't just chase the lowest premium; financial strength and claims-paying history matter more than saving a month.
Quick answers
A common rule is 10 to 15 times your annual income, but it depends on debts, dependents, and goals. I bought 12 times my income because I have a mortgage and two kids, and that felt like the right safety net.
For most people, term. It's far cheaper and covers the years when your family depends on your income. Whole life makes sense in narrow estate-planning cases, not for typical household protection.
Several insurers now offer no-exam term policies if you're under 50 and in good health, with coverage up to about a million dollars. I went with a no-exam policy from Haven Life and the whole process took ten days.







