Start with the commission cycle
A life insurance lead program pays for itself on a specific timeline. Term insurance pays first-year commission on approximately the first month of premium. Whole life and IUL pay on target premium, with heaped first-year commissions that typically reverse if the policy lapses in the first 12 to 24 months.
That matters because the agent's "lead ROI" is not measured in the month of the sale; it is measured after the chargeback window closes. A 13-month conservation of 80% turns what looked like a 5x ROI in month one into roughly a 4x ROI in month 14.
The three numbers that actually drive economics
- Contact rate (percentage of leads the agent speaks with).
- Write rate (percentage of contacted leads who bind).
- Average first-year premium (AFYP) per issued policy.
Cost per issued policy is per-lead-cost divided by (contact rate x write rate). Revenue per issued policy is AFYP times commission rate. Gross ROI is revenue divided by cost. Net ROI after chargebacks is revenue x conservation rate, divided by cost.
Benchmarks for 2026
Term and simplified-issue life, real-time form-filled inventory:
- Contact rate: 35% to 50% with a disciplined dialer team.
- Write rate: 4% to 9% on contacted leads.
- Per-lead cost: $15 to $45 depending on filters and exclusivity.
- Cost per issued policy: typically $350 to $900.
Final expense and aged life inventory convert on different math; see the final expense playbook for those numbers.
Where most agents lose money
Three patterns show up repeatedly when a lead program is underperforming:
- Slow first dial. Real-time leads dropped into a task queue for a supervisor to assign lose 30% to 50% of their contact-rate ceiling.
- Aged worked with a real-time cadence. Aged leads need 10 to 14 touches over two to three weeks, not five dials over two days.
- Over-filtering. An agent who loads a real-time filter set so tight that only 3 leads per day match pays a much higher implicit per-lead cost in lost agent utilization.
The budget question
A common starter budget for a single producer is 60 to 100 real-time form-filled life leads per month blended with 300 to 500 aged records. At blended cost this is typically $3,000 to $6,000 per producer, per month. This is the band where a well-trained producer should clear 2 to 4 issued policies per week at reasonable AFYP.
If a producer cannot clear this conversion band on this budget, the problem is almost never the lead source. It is cadence, script fit, or product placement. Swapping sources without fixing cadence repeats the loss.
The conservation lever
Conservation is the single most under-measured metric in the lead-buying world. A 5-point swing in 13-month conservation moves net ROI more than a 20% swing in per-lead cost. The agents who build durable books are obsessed with fit and needs analysis, not with hammering price down.
Written and fact-checked by The ClosrLeads Team.