Structured Settlements 4Real®Blog 2026

Structured settlements expert John Darer reviews the latest structured settlements and settlement planning information and news, and provides expert opinion and highly regarded commentary. that is spicy, Informative, irreverent and effective for over 20 years.

A question befitting the late "Archibald Bunker" has come across my desk today. "If i feel like i was a benefictionary (sic) on a life insurance claim but have not heard from the insurance company what do i need to do" Download

If the insured is still living, you will not be able to receive this information, unless the insured has given written authorization that the life insurer can release this information to you. If an insured has died, the beneficiary must contact the life insurance company and file a claim for the insurance money.  If you are a valid beneficiary the insurer will need to confirm your identity.

Alot of life insurance goes unclaimed. Calling it a "conservative" estimate, Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty said 40 of the largest U.S. life insurance companies may owe policy beneficiaries more than $1 billion, according to a May 19, 2011 article in MSN/Money.

If a beneficiary cannot be found the property is subject to being escheated, which is the forfeit of all property (including bank accounts) to the state treasury if it appears certain that there are no heirs, descendants or named beneficiaries to take the property upon the death of the last known owner.

Life insurers generally use the Death Master File, a Social Security Administration list of those who have died, but that has come under investigation is some parts. Usually it's the beneficiary's obligation to find the insurance company after an insured person dies. But that could change now that regulators are aware that some insurers may have used the Death Master File to figure out when to stop paying on annuities, but not when to make payouts to life insurance beneficiaries.

If you have a life insurance it is important to keep the life insurance policy or policies in  safe place (but not in a safe deposit box!), so that your loved ones will not have to rummage through your papers at a time of grief.

 

 

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One response to “Are You a Life Insurance Beneficiary?”

  1. Kate Avatar
    Kate

    Hi,
    Thanks for writing these great blogs on your site John! As an individual investor I have learned so much about the secondary market (for annuities, structured settlements, lottery payments, etc.) from your blogs and video series!!!
    I have some questions about individual buyers of life contingent structured settlement payment rights. Apparently folks like myself who buy life contingent payment rights also receive a life insurance policy on the original annuitant to protect their investment in addition to the policy for rights to those payments. If the original annuitant commits suicide within the first year (what I’ve been told), the entire investment is lost (no life insurance and no life contingent payments). After the first year if the original annuitant dies before payments are due to start, then the buyer receives the life insurance proceeds instead of the life contingent payments.
    Is suicide a concern for losing the investment only within the first year after payment rights transfer?
    How does one keep track of the living status of the original annuitant for the next couple decades if payments aren’t scheduled to start for least 20 years?
    How does one learn if the original annuitant died even if they own a life insurance policy on that annuitant?
    And if the original annuitant dies (not of suicide during the first year) would the proceeds of the entire life insurance policy be tax-free to the owner/beneficiary?
    What if the life insurance company insuring the annuitant goes under – can I just get another life insurance policy for the annuitant somewhere else without great effort?
    Finally, I guess one lingering question on my mind after all these life insurance questions is why is life insurance on the original annuitant even needed if the state court process changes the direct ownership of payment rights to the buyer?
    Does the industry have any guidance for individual consumers like myself in this regards?
    Thanks!

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