Life Insurance with Heart Disease — Plan With Phil guide

Life Insurance After a Heart Attack or Stents: The Timeline That Sets Your Price (2026)

Health Conditions · Life Insurance
⏱ 10-minute read
YesPost-event coverage exists
12 moTypical wait after an event
EF 50%+The number that opens doors
$0Broker fee, ever

If you’ve had a heart attack, stents, or a bypass, somebody has probably already told you to forget about life insurance. I want to push back on that hard, because I place these cases — regularly. The modern cardiac patient on modern treatment is nothing like the actuarial picture from 1995, and carrier guidelines have quietly moved with the medicine.

The honest framing: heart disease is the most time-sensitive condition in underwriting. Twelve months after a stent, you’re insurable at a price. Three years out with a strong echo and clean stress test, the price drops meaningfully. Five-plus years of stability? Some carriers get downright reasonable. The calendar does heavy lifting — but only if the file you submit shows the work you’ve done.

The post-event timeline that sets your price

Time since heart attack / procedureLikely outcomeTranslation
Under 6–12 monthsPostponed at most carriersUse bridge coverage; the wait is short
1–3 years, good recoveryTable 3–6Insurable; surcharge reflects recency
3–5 years, clean follow-upsTable 2–4Meaningfully cheaper
5+ years, strong EF, controlled risk factorsTable 2 — occasionally StandardThe payoff for stability
Key takeaway: Every cardiac case is priced on trajectory. The same bypass costs less to insure every year you stay boring — no new symptoms, good numbers, kept appointments. In this corner of underwriting, boring is beautiful.

What underwriters dig into

Ejection fraction

The percentage of blood your heart pumps per beat. 50%+ reads as preserved function and unlocks the better tables. Reduced EF doesn’t close the door, but it changes which carriers we talk to.

The extent of disease

Single-vessel, single stent, caught early? Very different file from triple-vessel disease. Your cath report tells this story — underwriters will read it, so we should know what it says first.

Risk factor control since the event

This is where you either bank credit or leak money: blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, smoking, weight. A post-event patient with an LDL of 65 on a statin, BP at 124, and a quit-date two years back is exactly who the better tables were built for. (Guides for each: cholesterol, blood pressure, quitting smoking.)

Follow-up cadence

A recent stress test or cardiology note saying “doing well, no ischemia” is worth real premium. A three-year gap in cardiac follow-up is the most expensive silence in insurance.

Your cardiac file earns the better tables when…
  • 12+ months since the event or procedure
  • Ejection fraction 50% or better on your latest echo
  • A stress test or cardiology follow-up within the past year, with no new findings
  • LDL, blood pressure, and blood sugar all at target on treatment
  • Tobacco-free — non-negotiable for the good cardiac tables
  • Cardiac rehab completed (it shows up in records and underwriters notice)

What you’ll pay: 2026 rate ranges

Monthly ranges for a $500,000, 20-year term, male non-smoker, post-heart-attack or stent with good recovery. Women run 15–25% less. Cardiac cases vary more than any other category — these are orientation, not gospel.

Age5+ yrs out, excellent recovery2–4 yrs out, good recovery1–2 yrs out
50$155–$220/mo$210–$300/mo$280–$420/mo
55$230–$330/mo$310–$450/mo$420–$620/mo
60$360–$510/mo$480–$700/mo$650–$950/mo
65$580–$820/mo$770–$1,100/moCase-by-case
Cardiac cases are my specialty — let me prove it

Tell me the event, the date, and your last EF. I’ll shop it informally across carriers that actually want cardiac business, and you’ll have honest numbers without touching your record.

Shop My Case Quietly →Call Phillip (646) 866-6990

Stents vs. bypass vs. “just blockage”

Stents (PCI): the most common file I see. Single-vessel stenting with preserved EF underwrites surprisingly well after year one — the procedure reads as “problem found and fixed.”

Bypass (CABG): bigger surgery, but here’s the quirk: a successful bypass with great follow-ups sometimes underwrites better than multi-vessel stenting, because the revascularization is more complete. Carriers respect a well-done CABG with a clean stress test.

Diagnosed blockage, no event: coronary artery disease found on a calcium score or angiogram without a heart attack is its own lane — often Table 2–4 depending on severity and treatment. If your calcium score spooked your doctor but you’ve never had symptoms, you’re more insurable than you think.

Heart failure / reduced EF: the hardest lane, but not a wall — carriers exist for EF down into the 40s with stability. Below that, we talk guaranteed-issue strategies honestly.

Need coverage before the timeline matures?

The 12-month postponement window is where families are most exposed — and where I see the worst panic-buying of overpriced products. The sane sequence:

Now: guaranteed-issue or simplified-issue coverage for immediate protection. Modest amounts, no health questions, real protection. At 12 months: apply fully underwritten at the matured timeline with your follow-up results in hand. Every year after: re-rate as your tables improve. I run this sequence for cardiac clients constantly — the early policy is a bridge, not a destination.

What to do next

1. Collect the cardiac file: event date, procedure reports, latest echo (EF), last stress test, med list.

2. Call me before applying anywhere. Cardiac is the one category where a wrong first application genuinely costs money — declines follow you on the industry database. Informal shopping first, always.

3. Or start with a quote request and note your cardiac history in the comments — I’ll reach out and we’ll do this properly.

Frequently asked questions

Can I get life insurance 6 months after a heart attack?
Fully underwritten — usually not yet; most carriers postpone until 12 months. But guaranteed-issue and some simplified-issue products can cover you immediately, and the full application at month 12 prices better with mature follow-up data anyway.
Does a stent count against me forever?
The event never vanishes from your history, but its pricing weight decays steadily. By years 3–5 with clean follow-ups, many carriers price you at tables that feel almost reasonable — and re-rating an in-force policy as you improve is standard practice.
My EF is 45%. Am I uninsurable?
No — mildly reduced EF with stability and good treatment is placeable at select carriers, at higher tables. The carrier list shrinks; it doesn’t vanish. This is precisely the case to shop informally first.
Will I need a new stress test to apply?
Carriers typically work from your existing records, but a recent clean stress test materially helps cardiac files. If your cardiologist was planning one anyway, do it before the application — fresh good news prices better than old good news.
What about term length — can I still get 20 or 30 years?
Post-cardiac applicants are routinely offered 15–20 year terms; 30-year availability depends on age and severity. Sometimes we layer: a 20-year base plus a smaller 10-year supplement during the heavy-mortgage years. Structure beats wishful thinking.
Key takeaway: The bottom line: heart disease coverage is a timeline business. Bridge now if you’re inside the window, apply with a complete file when it matures, and re-rate every year you stay boring. The price falls for people who do the work — make sure your paperwork proves you have.
Your second chapter deserves coverage too

Heart event behind you and family in front of you? Let’s get them protected — properly, patiently, at the best table your recovery has earned.

Start My Free Quote →Call Phillip (646) 866-6990
Phillip Chin, independent life insurance broker
Phillip Chin — Independent Life & Disability Insurance Broker

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 →

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