How Mental Health Affects Life Insurance
| Condition | Typical Impact on Premiums |
|---|---|
| Mild anxiety (past, resolved) | No impact – standard rates |
| Mild depression (past, resolved) | No impact – standard rates |
| Moderate depression (current, medicated) | Standard to small loading (0–25%) |
| Moderate anxiety (current, medicated) | Standard to small loading (0–25%) |
| Severe depression (hospitalised) | Loading or deferral, depends on recency |
| Bipolar disorder | Loading likely (50–100%+) |
| PTSD | Depends on severity and recency |
| Self-harm history | Depends on recency – may be deferred if recent |
| Eating disorders | Depends on severity and recovery status |
What You Must Disclose
You must declare your full mental health history, including:
- GP consultations for mental health (even if just one visit)
- Prescribed medication (antidepressants, anti-anxiety, mood stabilisers)
- Counselling, therapy, or CBT
- Time off work for mental health reasons
- Hospital admissions or crisis team involvement
- Any history of self-harm or suicidal thoughts
Tips for Getting the Best Terms
- Apply when stable – If you are in the middle of changing medication or having a crisis, wait until things settle
- Use a broker – They know which insurers are most sympathetic to mental health conditions
- Be matter-of-fact – Present your condition as managed and controlled
- Compare multiple insurers – Terms vary significantly for mental health between providers
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Current on medication: standard or near-standard rates. Past resolved: no impact.
Yes, always disclose. Mild anxiety rarely affects premiums. Non-disclosure risks claim rejection.