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How to Track Life Insurance Spending Without Bank Login

Track life insurance spending with LedgerLens. Average American spends $100/month ($1,200/year). See your real number. No bank login required.

March 31, 2026
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4 min read

The average American household spends $100 per month on life insurance -- that's $1,200 per year, representing 1.5% of the average household budget, according to BLS 2024.

But "average" doesn't mean "you." Your life insurance spending could be half that or double it, and unless you've actually added it up from your bank statements, you're guessing. Most people's guesses are off by 30-40%.

LedgerLens eliminates the guesswork. Upload your bank statements, and the AI categorization engine pulls every life insurance transaction into one clear view -- no bank login required, no account linking, no credentials shared.

Why Life Insurance Spending Is Hard to Track

Life Insurance charges don't always look like life insurance on your bank statement. Transaction descriptions are cryptic, categories are wrong, and charges get lumped together with unrelated purchases.

Here's what makes life insurance specifically tricky to track:

  • Inconsistent merchant names: The same store shows up differently depending on how you paid (card vs. app vs. online)
  • Bank miscategorization: Your bank's automatic categories frequently put life insurance charges in the wrong bucket
  • Spread across accounts: If you use multiple cards or accounts, life insurance spending is fragmented
  • Small charges add up: Individual life insurance transactions often seem insignificant, but the monthly total surprises people

What the Data Says: Life Insurance by the Numbers

| Metric | Amount | |--------|--------| | Monthly average (US household) | $100 | | Annual average | $1,200 | | Share of household budget | 1.5% | | Data source | BLS 2024 |

These are averages across all American households. Your actual spending depends on your location, household size, and lifestyle. The point isn't to match the average -- it's to know your real number so you can decide if it's where you want it to be.

How LedgerLens Tracks Life Insurance

Upload your bank statements (PDF or CSV) and LedgerLens does the rest:

  1. AI categorization: Every transaction is analyzed and assigned to the correct category. Life Insurance charges are identified even when the merchant name is cryptic or the bank miscategorized them.
  1. Historical trends: See your life insurance spending over weeks and months. Is it stable? Growing? Seasonal? The trend matters more than any single month.
  1. Merchant breakdown: See exactly which merchants account for your life insurance spending. Often one or two merchants dominate a category in ways you don't expect.
  1. Budget comparison: Compare your actual life insurance spending to the national average of $100/month. Are you above or below? By how much?
  1. Multi-account view: If you pay for life insurance across multiple cards or bank accounts, LedgerLens merges everything into one picture.

Taking Action on Your Life Insurance Data

Knowing your life insurance number is step one. Here's what to do with it:

  • If you're at or below average: You're doing fine. Focus your optimization energy on bigger categories.
  • If you're significantly above average: Look at the merchant breakdown. Is there one merchant driving the overage? One habit you could adjust?
  • If you have no idea: That's the most common scenario, and it's exactly why this page exists. Upload your statements and find out.

Get Started

Download your bank statements, upload to LedgerLens, and see exactly how much you spend on life insurance -- and everything else. No bank login required.

Free tier: analyze up to 3 statements. Plus ($12/month, $120/year): unlimited analysis with trends and tracking. Pro ($19/month, $190/year) for advanced exports.

The average American spends $1,200/year on life insurance. What's your number?

Ready to try it?

Try LedgerLens Free

Upload your bank statement and see where your money actually goes. No bank login required — your credentials stay with you.