| Scenario | Type | Coverage | Deductible | Credit | Breach | Add‑ons | Estimated annual |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low exposure | Individual | $25,000 | $500 | Excellent | 0 | Credit monitoring | $85–$135 |
| Average household | Family | $50,000 | $250 | Good | 1 | Monitoring + legal | $165–$260 |
| High online activity | Individual | $100,000 | $250 | Fair | 2 | Monitoring + enhanced | $240–$370 |
| Business owner | Family | $100,000 | $500 | Good | 2 | Enhanced + cyber | $290–$460 |
| Prior incident | Individual | $250,000 | $250 | Poor | 3 | All add‑ons | $520–$820 |
- Core premium = Base × CoverageFactor × DeductibleFactor × RiskMultiplier
- CoverageFactor = (CoverageLimit / 50,000)0.70, capped to a reasonable range
- DeductibleFactor decreases as deductible increases, capped
- RiskMultiplier combines credit band, breach history, online exposure, controls, and region factor
- Subtotal = Core premium + Add‑ons
- Discount = min(20%, annual pay + multi‑policy + claims‑free)
- Fees = AfterDiscount × (FeesRate ÷ 100)
- Total = AfterDiscount + Fees
- Pick a policy type and coverage limit you are considering.
- Set a deductible that matches your risk tolerance.
- Adjust region factor to reflect local risk conditions.
- Choose your credit band and exposure inputs honestly.
- Select add‑ons you want included in the estimate.
- Turn on discounts only if you truly qualify.
- Press Calculate to view results above the form.
- Download CSV or PDF to compare multiple scenarios.
Market drivers and exposure indicators
Identity theft losses often start with credential reuse, data breaches, and high‑frequency online activity. In this calculator, breach history, account count, and public Wi‑Fi days act as exposure proxies. Increasing known breaches from 0 to 5 can raise the risk multiplier by up to 25%. Moving from 10 to 60 online accounts can add 12%.
Coverage components and cost levers
Premiums respond most strongly to annual coverage limits and deductibles. Coverage uses a diminishing‑returns curve so doubling coverage does not double cost. Deductibles reduce premium because you retain more loss. Family policies start from a higher base rate, and child identities add a predictable supplement per child. Add‑ons such as monitoring, enhanced restoration, legal expenses, lost wages, and cyber fraud coverage are priced as flat annual supplements to keep comparisons consistent across scenarios.
Interpreting the risk score
The 0–100 risk score is a planning metric that summarizes profile risk and protective controls. Lower scores typically reflect strong controls like credit freezes and wide two‑factor usage. Higher scores commonly reflect weaker credit bands, frequent breaches, heavy public Wi‑Fi use, or prior incidents. Region factor scales the score and the premium to reflect different baseline environments.
Scenario testing and budgeting
Use the deductible sensitivity graph to quantify tradeoffs. If the annual estimate drops meaningfully when moving from a $250 to $1,000 deductible, you can decide whether the savings justify higher out‑of‑pocket risk. Discounts are capped at 20% in the model, and fees apply as a percentage of the discounted subtotal. Export CSV or PDF results to compare options, then budget using monthly premium as a steady cash‑flow proxy.
Practical risk controls to reduce cost
Controls can lower the multiplier without changing coverage. Turning on a credit freeze and enabling two‑factor authentication can reduce pricing by several percentage points in this model. Pair that with fewer public Wi‑Fi sessions, unique passwords, and faster breach response. Lower exposure typically improves both risk score and premium while preserving chosen limits.
What does the “coverage limit” represent?
It is the maximum annual benefit the policy may pay for covered identity theft costs such as restoration services, legal support, or reimbursements, subject to policy terms and sublimits.
Why does my deductible change the premium?
A higher deductible means you pay more before benefits apply. Insurers often reward this with a lower premium because the expected claim cost to the insurer is reduced.
Is the risk score the same as my credit score?
No. The risk score is a calculator metric that blends exposure inputs, region factor, and controls. It helps compare scenarios; it does not replace lender or bureau credit scoring.
How should I use the region factor?
Select a value that matches your local environment. Use 1.00 for a neutral baseline, lower values for lower risk areas, and higher values when you expect higher fraud activity.
Do add‑ons always make the plan better?
Not always. Add‑ons increase cost but may reduce hassle and out‑of‑pocket exposure. Compare scenarios with and without add‑ons, then prioritize the features that match your likely needs.
Can I rely on this estimate as an official quote?
No. This tool provides a planning estimate using a transparent model. Actual pricing depends on insurer underwriting, eligibility rules, local regulations, and the specific policy wording.