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Executive Life Insurance Planning Series

Human Life Value Calculator for Executives: The Income-Based Framework for Quantifying Life Insurance Need

Most executives carry two to five times base salary in life insurance, a number derived from employer group benefit structures rather than from any principled economic analysis. A CFO earning $920,000 annually at age 47 with 18 working years remaining has a Human Life Value exceeding $8.3 million. Their group life policy covers $2.76 million. The $5.5 million gap is not a minor rounding error, it is the precise amount of economic loss their family would absorb if they died today. Here is the complete HLV calculation framework.

By USFinanceCalculators EditorialUpdated June 12, 2026Reading Time: 21 min readExecutive Planning Guide
$8.3M
Typical HLV for CFO Earning $920K at Age 47
Typical Executive Coverage (Severely Underinsured)
1927
Year Huebner Introduced Human Life Value Theory
40%
Executives Who Include Equity Comp in HLV Analysis

The Huebner Human Life Value Theory: Economics as the Foundation of Life Insurance Need

Solomon S. Huebner, founder of the American College of Financial Services and widely regarded as the father of insurance education, introduced the Human Life Value concept in 1927 as a rigorous economic alternative to the intuition-based approaches that dominated insurance sales at the time. Huebner’s insight was deceptively simple: every working person is an economic machine that generates a stream of income over their career. If that machine stops, due to death, the family or business that depended on it suffers a quantifiable economic loss. Life insurance exists to indemnify that loss, just as property insurance indemnifies the loss of a building or vehicle.

What made Huebner’s framework revolutionary was its refusal to anchor coverage recommendations in arbitrary multiples of salary or in crude rule-of-thumb methods. Instead, it applied present value mathematics to project the actual stream of future income that would be lost, discounted at a rate reflecting the time value of money, and adjusted for the executive’s personal consumption (the portion of income they would have spent on themselves). The result, the Human Life Value, is a defensible economic estimate of the family’s loss, not a guess dressed up as analysis.

For high-income executives, the HLV framework is uniquely powerful because it captures the full economic output of a professional career, including bonuses, equity compensation, employer benefit contributions, and long-term incentive payouts, that simple salary multiples miss entirely. An executive carrying three times base salary in coverage when their HLV is seven to ten times total compensation has effectively self-insured the gap, typically without realizing it.

The HLV Calculation Formula: Step-by-Step for High-Income Earners

The Human Life Value calculation follows a present value annuity framework applied to the executive’s projected annual economic output. The precise calculation has several components that must each be modeled carefully to produce a defensible result.

The Core HLV Formula

The fundamental HLV formula is: HLV = PV[(Annual After-Tax Income) minus (Self-Maintenance Costs)] over Working Years Remaining, discounted at rate r.

In practice, this means: (1) determine total annual gross compensation including all components; (2) apply the executive’s effective federal and state income tax rate to arrive at after-tax compensation; (3) subtract the executive’s personal self-maintenance costs, the portion of household spending attributable to the executive personally, typically estimated at 15 to 25 percent of income for high earners; (4) project this net annual economic contribution over the working years remaining to retirement; and (5) discount the projected stream to present value at an appropriate rate.

HLV Formula Components, Executive Example

Regional Bank President, Age 50, 15 Years to Retirement, $780,000 Total Comp

Base salary$420,000
Annual cash bonus (3-yr average)$210,000
Long-term incentive cash award$80,000
Employer 401(k) match + benefit value$28,000
Employer health insurance premium$22,000
Total gross economic output$760,000
Effective combined tax rate39.5%
After-tax annual output$459,800
Personal self-maintenance deduction (18%)-$82,764
Net annual economic contribution to family$377,036
Present value of 15-year annuity at 5.0%$3,924,000 HLV
Current group life coverage (3x base salary)$1,260,000
HLV coverage gap$2,664,000 underinsured

Executive Compensation Components to Include in the HLV Analysis

The most common error in HLV analysis for executives is using base salary as a proxy for total economic output. For most senior executives, base salary represents only 40 to 60 percent of total compensation. The following components must each be included and projected carefully.

Cash Bonus and Short-Term Incentives

Annual cash bonuses should be included at a normalized level, not at peak or at the most recent year’s amount, which may be unrepresentative. A three-year trailing average of actual bonuses paid is the most defensible method. For executives with highly variable bonus outcomes (private equity professionals, investment bankers), a more conservative estimate using the minimum expected bonus may be appropriate to avoid over-insuring an income component that is not guaranteed.

Long-Term Incentive Cash Awards

Many executives receive cash-settled long-term incentive awards payable over three to five year periods. These should be included in the HLV analysis at their expected annual economic value, typically the grant value divided by the vesting period. Like bonus income, multi-year average actuals are more reliable than grant assumptions for executives with a track record of receiving these awards.

Employer Benefit Contributions

Employer-paid benefits represent genuine economic output that the family would need to replace or fund personally if the executive died. The employer’s share of health insurance premiums (often $22,000 to $35,000 annually for family coverage), 401(k) employer match, and any employer-paid disability or life insurance premiums should all be included in the gross economic output used for HLV calculation.

Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation in HLV

Executives with significant Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) plan balances face a nuanced HLV question: the deferred compensation will be paid out over time even if the executive dies, so it partially offsets the HLV need. However, NQDC plans are unsecured obligations of the employer and carry credit risk, the balance could be lost in an employer bankruptcy. For HLV purposes, include projected future NQDC deferrals in the income analysis but note that existing NQDC account balances provide a partial offset, subject to credit risk analysis of the employer’s financial strength.

HLV vs Needs-Based Analysis: When Each Approach Leads to Better Coverage Decisions

Human Life Value
Starting pointExecutive’s economic output
What it measuresEconomic loss to family
Coverage resultHigher, captures full income
Best forHigh earners, business owners
LimitationMay exceed what family needs
Needs-Based Analysis
Starting pointFamily’s projected expenses
What it measuresCash needs of survivors
Coverage resultOften lower, expense-driven
Best forYoung families, moderate incomes
Better reflects stated goals
DIME Method
CoversDebt, Income, Mortgage, Education
ComplexityLow, additive categories
MissesEquity comp, benefits value
Best forInitial planning estimate
For executivesUsually significantly inadequate

For most high-income executives, the needs-based analysis produces a materially lower coverage recommendation than HLV, and for many, either amount is supportable depending on whether the family’s goal is income maintenance at the executive’s current level or modest expense coverage. The critical question is: what standard of living should the family be able to maintain indefinitely? For most executives whose families are accustomed to a high-income lifestyle, the HLV-derived coverage, the amount that fully replaces economic output, is the appropriate target.

Equity Compensation in HLV: The Component Most Executives Miss Entirely

Technology, financial services, and growth-company executives frequently derive 40 to 70 percent of their total economic output from equity compensation, RSU vesting, option exercise proceeds, and performance share unit payouts. This component is almost universally omitted from insurance coverage analysis conducted by advisors who focus on base salary multiples.

Including equity compensation in the HLV analysis requires careful treatment of several variables. First, RSU income should be projected at the expected annual vesting value, not at current unvested grant amounts, because future grants will continue as long as the executive remains employed. Second, option exercise proceeds are inherently difficult to project because they depend on stock price performance, using a conservative intrinsic value at a discount is more defensible than projecting stock appreciation. Third, if death would accelerate vesting of existing unvested awards, the present value of those accelerated awards reduces the HLV by the amount the family would receive through acceleration rather than through insurance.

Equity Compensation in HLV, Technology VP Example

Software VP of Engineering, Age 44, Large-Cap Tech Company, Annual Income Components

Base salary$380,000
Annual cash bonus (target)$114,000
RSU vesting value (annualized from current grants)$520,000
Projected future RSU grant value (annualized)$480,000
Total annual economic output including equity$1,494,000
Analysis excluding equity$494,000, only 33% of true output
HLV at 5% discount, 21 remaining years, 42% tax, 20% self-maintenance$7,840,000
HLV if equity excluded from analysis$2,594,000
Coverage gap from omitting equity comp$5,246,000 underestimated

Calculate Your Complete Human Life Value

Include base salary, bonus, equity compensation, employer benefits, and remaining working years to see your true economic loss, and your current group life insurance gap.

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Selecting the Right Discount Rate for the HLV Present Value Calculation

The discount rate applied to the HLV present value calculation is the most consequential assumption in the analysis and is frequently treated casually. The rate represents the expected return on invested capital, conceptually, what the family would earn by investing a lump sum death benefit to generate the equivalent income stream. A higher rate produces a lower HLV (future income is worth less today), and a lower rate produces a higher HLV.

Three frameworks are commonly used to select the discount rate. The Treasury-based approach uses the current 10-year Treasury yield (approximately 4.25 to 4.75 percent as of mid-2026) as the risk-free rate appropriate for a family that would invest conservatively. The balanced portfolio approach uses a blended expected return assumption, typically 5.5 to 7.0 percent, for a family that would invest in a diversified stock and bond portfolio. The annuity purchase approach models the rate at which the family could purchase a guaranteed income annuity, typically the most conservative and most defensible for clients who prioritize certainty.

For executives whose families would manage substantial inherited wealth through a diversified portfolio, a discount rate in the 5.0 to 6.0 percent range is reasonable. For conservative families or surviving spouses with limited investment experience, the Treasury-based rate is more appropriate. The choice matters: the difference between a 4 percent and 6 percent discount rate on a 20-year HLV calculation can affect the recommended coverage by 20 to 30 percent.

Social Security Survivor Benefits as an HLV Offset: How Much Does It Matter for Executives?

Social Security survivor benefits provide a retirement income replacement stream to surviving spouses and dependent children, a stream that partially offsets the family’s economic loss and reduces the HLV-derived life insurance need. The survivor benefit amount depends on the deceased’s earnings record and when the surviving spouse elects to begin receiving benefits.

For executives with earnings consistently well above the Social Security maximum wage base ($176,100 in 2026), the Social Security survivor benefit replaces only a modest fraction of the family’s total income loss. A surviving spouse of an executive earning $900,000 annually receives survivor benefits based on the capped earnings record, a benefit that may be $3,000 to $4,800 per month ($36,000 to $57,600 annually), representing 4 to 6 percent of the family’s annual income. The offset is real but proportionally small, and should be included in the HLV calculation for accuracy without being treated as material to the coverage recommendation for high earners.

For executives whose compensation is more moderate, $150,000 to $350,000, Social Security survivor benefits represent a larger fraction of the income replacement need and should be carefully quantified. The Social Security Administration’s survivor benefit estimator tool, available at ssa.gov, provides personalized benefit estimates based on the actual earnings record.

Business-Focused HLV: Quantifying the Economic Loss When a Key Executive Dies

Companies with heavy dependence on individual executives, particularly founder-operators, top revenue producers, and executives with unique technical or strategic expertise, face an economic loss at the executive’s death that is distinct from, and typically larger than, the executive’s personal HLV. This business-focused HLV is the foundation for key person life insurance coverage sizing.

The business HLV calculation replaces the personal income stream with the executive’s economic contribution to business value: the revenue attributable to the executive’s client relationships, the EBITDA impact of losing their contribution, the cost of recruiting and onboarding a qualified replacement, the potential client attrition during transition, and any ongoing strategic value they would have generated over their expected tenure. For a founder-CEO with $12 million in annual attributable revenue, the business HLV may be several times larger than their personal income HLV, producing key person coverage requirements that significantly exceed what most businesses carry.

5-Step HLV Protocol for Executive Life Insurance Planning

1

Compile Total Compensation Documentation Including All Components

Pull the most recent three years of W-2 forms, annual bonus statements, equity award agreements with vesting schedules, and employer benefit summaries. Do not rely on a single year’s numbers, bonus and equity income can be highly variable, and averaging multiple years produces a more defensible income projection than any single year’s actual total.

2

Determine Your Effective Combined Tax Rate

Calculate the effective federal income tax rate from your most recent Form 1040 (total tax divided by total income) and add your state marginal rate. For executives with significant long-term capital gains from equity compensation, note that different income components are taxed at different rates. For HLV purposes, using the weighted average effective rate across all compensation types is a defensible approach.

3

Estimate Personal Self-Maintenance Costs

Self-maintenance costs are the portion of household spending attributable to the executive personally, their food, clothing, transportation, personal discretionary spending, and personal medical care. For executives living in a two-income household, this is typically 15 to 22 percent of after-tax income. For executives who are the sole earner, self-maintenance may be estimated at 20 to 28 percent. Review actual household spending data rather than using generic percentages for a more accurate figure.

4

Apply the Present Value Discount and Calculate Net HLV

Apply the present value annuity formula to the net annual economic contribution (after-tax income minus self-maintenance) over the working years remaining at the selected discount rate. Subtract the present value of expected Social Security survivor benefits as an offset. The result is the net HLV, the amount of life insurance needed to fully indemnify the family’s economic loss.

5

Compare Net HLV to Current Coverage and Address the Gap with Supplemental Coverage

Subtract total current life insurance coverage, group employer life plus any personally owned individual policies, from the net HLV to identify the coverage gap. Address the gap through supplemental individual permanent or term life insurance. For executives with large gaps that exceed individual policy underwriting limits, multiple policies with different insurers can be structured to aggregate the total coverage needed.

Case Study: Complete HLV Calculation for a Fortune 500 CFO

A 47-year-old CFO at a mid-cap consumer products company receives $920,000 in total compensation: $480,000 base salary, $192,000 annual cash bonus (average of last three years), $168,000 in RSU vesting per year, and $80,000 in employer benefit contributions (health insurance premium, 401(k) match, executive life premium). She plans to retire at age 65, 18 years from now. Her combined federal-state effective tax rate is 41.5 percent. Personal self-maintenance costs are estimated at 18 percent of after-tax income. Current life insurance: $1.44 million group life (3x base salary) plus a $750,000 individual term policy purchased ten years ago.

Complete HLV Calculation

Fortune 500 CFO, Age 47, 18 Years to Retirement, Full Analysis

Total gross annual compensation$920,000
Effective combined tax rate41.5%
Annual after-tax compensation$538,200
Personal self-maintenance deduction (18%)-$96,876
Net annual economic contribution to family$441,324
Present value of 18-year annuity at 5.0% discount rate$5,148,000
Social Security survivor benefit offset (PV estimate)-$380,000
Net Human Life Value$4,768,000
Current coverage: group life + individual term$2,190,000
HLV coverage gap$2,578,000 underinsured
Recommended supplemental coverage$2,600,000 additional
Annual premium for $2.6M 20-year term (F, 47, non-smoker)~$4,800/yr

The CFO had carried what felt like adequate life insurance, nearly $2.2 million between her group life benefit and the individual term policy she purchased in her mid-thirties. What the HLV analysis revealed was a $2.58 million coverage gap attributable primarily to the omission of equity compensation and employer benefits from her earlier insurance planning. The additional $2.6 million of term coverage costs approximately $4,800 annually, less than one percent of her total compensation, and closes the gap entirely. When her employer’s annual benefits enrollment opens, she will also maximize the supplemental group life benefit available up to five times salary, further reducing the individual policy need.

Run Your Complete Human Life Value Analysis

Include base, bonus, equity, and benefits to see your actual HLV and identify precisely how much additional coverage is needed to fully protect your family’s economic position.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Human Life Value method for calculating life insurance? +
The Human Life Value (HLV) method calculates life insurance need as the present value of the insured’s future after-tax earned income, minus the portion the insured would have spent on personal self-maintenance. It answers the question: how much economic value would be lost if this person died today? It is particularly powerful for high-income earners where simple salary multiples significantly underestimate the family’s true income replacement requirement.
How is Human Life Value calculated for an executive? +
For an executive, HLV is calculated as: (1) project total annual compensation including base, bonus, equity, and employer benefits; (2) apply the effective combined federal-state income tax rate to arrive at after-tax compensation; (3) subtract personal self-maintenance costs (15 to 25 percent of after-tax income); (4) project this net annual economic contribution over remaining working years; (5) discount to present value at an appropriate rate; (6) subtract the present value of expected Social Security survivor benefits as an offset.
How does HLV differ from the needs-based approach to life insurance? +
The needs-based approach calculates coverage from the surviving family’s projected expenses. HLV calculates coverage from the economic loss the family suffers, the present value of all future income the deceased would have generated. For high-income earners, HLV typically produces larger coverage recommendations because it captures the full economic value of the executive’s earning capacity, not just the family’s modeled spending requirements.
Why do most executives carry far less life insurance than their HLV? +
Most executives carry two to five times base salary, a multiple derived from employer group life benefit structures rather than rigorous economic analysis. An executive earning $850,000 annually carrying $2.5 million in coverage has insured roughly 30 percent of their HLV if the true HLV is $8 million. The gap exists because most executives have never seen a rigorous HLV analysis and accept the group life benefit as their baseline coverage level.
What compensation components should be included in the HLV calculation? +
All components of total compensation should be included: base salary; annual cash bonus (three-year average); long-term incentive cash payouts; equity compensation income (RSU vesting, option exercise proceeds) at expected average annual value; and the imputed value of employer-paid benefits including health insurance premiums, 401(k) match, and non-qualified deferred compensation benefits. Many executives underestimate their total economic output by 20 to 40 percent by omitting equity compensation and benefits.
How does equity compensation affect HLV for technology executives? +
For technology executives with significant RSU grants, equity compensation can exceed base salary and bonus combined. RSU income should be included at the expected average annual vesting value, not at peak or grant date assumptions. If unvested RSUs would be forfeited at death (check the equity plan carefully), include the present value of expected future grants as well as currently unvested awards. Omitting equity from the analysis can understate the HLV by 50 to 70 percent for equity-heavy compensation structures.
What discount rate should be used in the HLV present value calculation? +
The discount rate represents the return the family would earn by investing a lump sum death benefit. Common choices: the current 10-year Treasury yield for conservative families; a blended 5 to 7 percent portfolio return for families investing in diversified portfolios; or current annuity rates if modeling income replacement through annuity purchase. A higher discount rate produces a lower HLV. For executives whose families would manage substantial inherited wealth, 5.0 to 6.0 percent is a reasonable range.
Should Social Security survivor benefits be deducted from the HLV? +
Yes, the present value of expected Social Security survivor benefits is a legitimate offset to the gross HLV. However, for executives whose earnings substantially exceed the Social Security maximum wage base ($176,100 in 2026), survivor benefits replace only 4 to 6 percent of the annual income loss, making them a small offset relative to the total HLV. Estimate survivor benefits using the SSA’s online estimator and include the present value as a credit in the HLV calculation.
How does HLV change when a business uses it to value a key executive? +
When a business applies HLV to determine key person life insurance, the relevant calculation is the executive’s contribution to business value: attributable revenue, EBITDA impact of their departure, replacement costs, client attrition risk, and strategic value they would have generated. This business-focused HLV often produces higher coverage amounts than personal income replacement calculation, particularly for founder-operators or top revenue producers whose departure would materially impair business value.