Defending Digital Lives: Strengthening The Connection Between Life Insurers and Policyholders with Cyber Protection
Cyber risk has rapidly become a personal risk, touching consumers across every age group, income level, and stage of life. While life insurance has traditionally focused on long-term financial protection, today’s policyholders increasingly expect solutions that help safeguard their digital identities, financial accounts, and families in real time. The following article, contributed by Karen Malone, Senior Business Development Executive for Life Insurance at TransUnion, explores how cyber protection is emerging as a natural extension of living benefits—and how life insurers are uniquely positioned to strengthen policyholder relationships by addressing this growing need.
Given the epidemic of headline-grabbing cybercrime during the past decade, interest in cyber protection has skyrocketed. People want to protect themselves, and their insurers are among the best positioned to help them – regardless of the lines of insurance coverage they have.
Cyber’s trajectory looks a lot like auto insurance did a century ago, when vehicle coverage was undervalued and therefore tacked onto general liability policies. As car accidents mounted, adoption took off — and niche product evolved into a household necessity.
Personal cyber is following a similar arc, which creates opportunities for savvy, innovative life insurers. By understanding what’s driving demand and how they can enhance their offering with cyber protection services, insurers can take advantage of the growing interest in living benefits while strengthening their relationships with policyholders.
Cyber protection enters the mainstream
Increasingly, individuals recognize the value of cyber protection that goes beyond identity theft protection — especially as criminal use of generative AI (genAI) makes social engineering scams more convincing. Extortion of family members, hijacking seniors’ retirement accounts and taking over kids’ gaming and social accounts are just some of the tactics cybercriminals employ.
Regardless of their age or geography, consumers increasingly want the identity and data monitoring, recovery and expense reimbursement services similar to those that protect business leaders.
Turning demand into revenue
As scams become more sophisticated, the stigma of falling victim fades. In fact, many public figures now share their experiences of being scammed via national newspapers and popular streaming services.
The result is a more sympathetic target audience, but where can individuals find the cyber protection they need?
Many consumers get personal cyber protection through their homeowners’ policy — but that often excludes Gen Z consumers, many of whom are not yet homeowners. Realtor.com discovered while nearly half of surveyed Zoomers felt ready to buy a house, only 36% were financially ready to do so.
By offering in-demand cyber protection services, smart life insurers can fill that gap, differentiate their offering, and build an early, meaningful, and ongoing relationship with a customer segment that NeilsenIQ projects will have $12 trillion in spending power by the end of the decade.
Building brand loyalty through engagement
While individuals may recognize they’re at risk, fewer know exactly what the threats are or how to react when they’re a victim. Ongoing education and personalized insights into their unique risk profiles can engage policyholders, empowering them to protect themselves. It also creates opportunities to reinforce the insurer’s brand.
With a co-branded solution, an insurer reinforces its value to policyholders whenever they receive alerts of suspicious activity involving their identity information. Regular educational content about the latest scams keeps the insurer-policyholder relationship current and relevant.
Demonstrating their value positions life insurers as trusted advisors dedicated to their policyholders’ well-being — opening the door for cross-sell and upsell opportunities.
Expanding services, enhancing reputations
Today’s consumers must combat misuse of their personal information while avoiding social engineering scams, malware, account takeovers, and damaged reputations. A broad set of solutions is necessary, so life insurers might take a page from their property and casualty peers who layer integrated protection solutions over their existing offering to add policyholder value while reducing risk.
With the right cyber protection partner, life insurers can offer the tailored services consumers want but cannot get elsewhere, including personalized identity monitoring and restoration, proactive education and advice, and support from a dedicated restoration specialist. When personalized to the individual, the perceived value is astronomical when an incident occurs.
Life insurers can leverage that value, embedding such cyber protection services into their existing books of business. Consumers gain access to the protection they seek, while life insurers build reputations as innovators dedicated to holistic care for policyholders.
Personal cyber on the verge of ubiquity
As with auto insurance a century ago, getting personal cyber protection into the hands of more consumers is a challenge — but providing more access points to effective solutions will encourage broad adoption.
Life insurers who choose to embrace the personal cyber opportunity in 2026 can make essential cyber protection accessible to the most susceptible while simultaneously finding new avenues for engagement, profitability, sustainability and growth.
This article is adapted from TransUnion’s eBook, 2026 Cyber Protection Challenges and Opportunities., and reflects the research, insights, and industry perspective provided by Karen Malone and the TransUnion life insurance team. As cyber threats continue to evolve, their work highlights an important opportunity for life insurers to expand beyond traditional coverage models and play a more proactive role in protecting policyholders’ digital lives—while building stronger, more enduring customer relationships in the process.
Originally posted at: Broker World