Life Insurance with AFib: How Managed Cases Get Standard Rates (2026)
Atrial fibrillation has a scary name, a scarier Wikipedia page, and — here’s the part nobody tells you in the cardiologist’s waiting room — surprisingly civilized life insurance outcomes when it’s managed. Millions of Americans live with AFib on a beta blocker and a blood thinner, and carriers underwrite it every single day.
Managed AFib with a clean cardiac workup typically lands between Standard and Table 2. Occasional paroxysmal episodes with a structurally normal heart can even do better. The cases that get expensive are the ones with question marks: no workup, no treatment plan, or AFib tangled up with heart failure or valve disease. Your job — and mine — is making sure your file reads as the managed kind.
Why your TYPE of AFib drives the price
| Your AFib | Likely class | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| Lone/paroxysmal — rare episodes, normal heart, younger onset | Standard Plus possible | Near-normal pricing |
| Paroxysmal, controlled on medication, clean echo | Standard to Table 2 | Routine approval, modest bump |
| Persistent/permanent, rate-controlled, otherwise stable | Table 2–4 | Real surcharge, still very placeable |
| AFib + heart failure, valve disease, or prior stroke | Higher tables / case-by-case | The combination drives it — see below |
The cardiac workup underwriters want to see
The echo
An echocardiogram showing normal chambers, valves, and ejection fraction reframes everything. If yours is older than 2–3 years, a fresh one before applying often pays for itself in premium.
Stroke prevention
This surprises people: being ON a blood thinner (Eliquis, Xarelto) usually helps your file when your risk score warrants it. It shows the #1 AFib danger — stroke — is being actively managed. Untreated AFib with stroke risk factors is what makes underwriters reach for the decline stamp.
Episode control
How often, how long, and when was the last one? Documented rhythm control or successful rate control with no recent ER visits reads beautifully.
The company AFib keeps
Thyroid issues, sleep apnea, alcohol, and blood pressure all feed AFib. Treated triggers strengthen your story — my sleep apnea and blood pressure guides cover two of the big ones.
- Echo within 2–3 years showing a structurally normal heart
- On appropriate stroke prevention for your risk score
- No ER visits or cardioversions in the past 12 months
- Regular cardiology follow-up (even annual counts)
- Underlying triggers — apnea, thyroid, alcohol — addressed
What you’ll pay: 2026 rate ranges
Monthly ranges for a $500,000, 20-year term, male non-smoker. Women run 15–25% less.
| Age | Paroxysmal, clean workup | Persistent, managed | Complex cardiac picture |
|---|---|---|---|
| 45 | $60–$85/mo | $95–$140/mo | $160–$250/mo |
| 50 | $90–$125/mo | $140–$200/mo | $235–$360/mo |
| 55 | $135–$190/mo | $210–$300/mo | $355–$540/mo |
| 60 | $210–$295/mo | $330–$460/mo | $540–$800/mo |
| 65 | $340–$470/mo | $520–$720/mo | Case-by-case |
Read me your last echo summary and med list, and I’ll tell you which carriers read AFib kindly — several genuinely do. Free call, no obligation.
Compare My Real Rates →Call Phillip (646) 866-6990Ablation, cardioversion & the reset button
Had a successful ablation? This is the closest thing to an underwriting reset that exists for AFib. Six to twelve months post-ablation with no recurrence, carriers increasingly treat you as a dramatically improved risk — some approach normal-heart pricing after a clean year or two. Keep every follow-up EKG; they’re receipts.
Cardioversions read as treatment events, not failures — but multiple recent ones suggest unstable rhythm and push toward waiting 6–12 stable months before applying.
The watch-and-wait diagnosis: if you were told you had “a touch of AFib” years ago and nothing since, get it documented. A single resolved episode with years of normal rhythm can underwrite remarkably close to clean — but only if the records actually say so.
What to do next
1. Gather the cardiac paper trail: last echo, current meds, episode history, any ablation/cardioversion dates.
2. Run a quote or call me first — AFib is a condition I always shop informally before any formal application, because carrier appetite varies sharply.
3. If your workup is stale, see your cardiologist before applying. Fresh clean data beats old ambiguous data by a full rate class.
Frequently asked questions
Is being on blood thinners a problem for approval?
I had one AFib episode after surgery years ago. Does it count?
Can I get coverage right after being diagnosed?
Does AFib plus a past stroke change things?
Will my smartwatch AFib alerts show up in underwriting?
I’ve placed AFib cases from lone-episode to post-ablation to permanent. One call gets you the honest landscape across 25+ carriers.
Start My Free Quote →Call Phillip (646) 866-6990
Phillip has helped families and professionals across the country find the right coverage since 2016. He works with 25+ A-rated carriers, charges no broker fees, and answers his own phone. More about Phillip →
