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Florida stay-at-home dad holding a sleeping newborn close in soft indoor light, representing the daily caregiving labor a term life policy is meant to replace
Family & Life Stages

Life Insurance for Stay-at-Home Dads in Florida: What Your Unpaid Labor Is Actually Worth

By Ali Taqi · · 4 min read

A Tampa dad emailed me last month: his wife is the family's surgeon, he runs the two kids and the household, and his term life agent quoted him a $100K policy "since you don't earn anything." That number is wrong by roughly half a million dollars. Florida stay-at-home dads (SAHDs) carry real economic weight — childcare, pickups, doctor visits, meal planning, the whole logistics layer — that costs $45,000 to $65,000 a year to replace at Florida-market rates. If you are the primary caregiver in your household, your unpaid labor deserves the same coverage math as your wife's W-2.

Key Takeaway

Florida SAHDs typically need $500K–$750K of 20-year term, priced on the replacement cost of their childcare and household labor — not on their lack of paycheck. Apply while the kids are young, the body is rested, and your wife's income makes the premium a rounding error.

Why "I Don't Earn Anything" Is the Wrong Frame

Underwriters care about the financial gap your absence would open, not your W-2 in isolation. Run the Florida numbers honestly:

  • Childcare for two kids under 5: $1,800–$2,800/month at a Tampa, Orlando, or Miami daycare. Annualized: $22K–$34K.
  • After-school care + summer camps: $250–$600/week per kid. Easily $8K–$15K a year for one elementary kid in Hillsborough or Orange County.
  • Outsourced household services: cleaning, meal prep, errands, appointment logistics. Conservatively $10K–$15K a year.
  • Reduced earning capacity for the surviving spouse. If your wife is a physician or partner-track attorney, her income drops the moment she has to leave by 3pm for school pickup. Often the biggest line item.

Add it up: $45K–$65K of pure replacement cost a year, plus a 10–25% income hit on the working spouse. Multiply by the years until your youngest is 18 and you're staring at a $700K–$1.2M gap. A 20-year, $750K term policy on a healthy 35-year-old SAHD typically runs $35–$55 a month in Florida — the cheapest insurance you will ever buy on the most expensive labor in your house.

Florida dad cradling a sleeping baby on his chest at home, representing the daily caregiving labor and household management that life insurance is meant to replace

Florida-Specific Underwriting Realities for SAHDs

Two things trip up SAHD applications, and both are fixable in advance.

First, carriers ask about earned income. Some still default to capping the SAHD's coverage at 1–2x the working spouse's income — a holdover rule that doesn't fit the modern caregiver economy. Independent agents who shop 15+ carriers know which Florida-friendly underwriters use household income or explicit replacement-cost math. The right carrier will write $750K on a SAHD whose wife earns $250K; the wrong one caps you at $250K and calls it a day.

Second, the medical exam matters more than most dads realize. Sleep deprivation in caregiving years 1–4 is no joke — overnight wakeups, dad-bod weight gain, blood pressure creep, and undiagnosed sleep apnea all show up on labs. The prep that helps any Florida new dad (morning slot, hydrate, skip caffeine and salt, no hard workouts 48 hours before) lands SAHDs a Preferred class instead of Standard. On a 20-year $750K term, that is roughly $4,000–$6,000 of premium savings over the life of the policy.

How Much, and What Term Length

Use the same formula as the general new-parents guide, but plug in your replacement cost — not your wife's income — on your side of the ledger:

  • One kid under 3, dad 30–34: $500K–$700K, 25-year term.
  • Two kids under 6, dad 33–38: $700K–$1M, 20-year term. High end if your wife earns above $200K.
  • Three kids, dad 35–42: $1M–$1.25M, 20-year term. Childcare logistics scale non-linearly with kid #3.

The stay-at-home parents companion post covers the gender-neutral version of this math. The dad-specific reality is that SAHDs are statistically more likely to be uninsured, more likely to be quoted too low, and more likely to skip exam prep that protects rate class. Don't be that statistic.

The Move

Apply for both spouses in parallel — same agent, same week. The SAHD policy is the cheaper of the two, underwriting is faster (no employer income verification), and the kids are one year older every year you wait. Get a Florida-specific quote on coverage that reflects what your household actually runs on.

The dad doing pickup, packing lunchboxes, and rocking the baby at 2am is doing $50,000 a year of skilled labor. Insure it like the asset it is.

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