If a family member dies and you are unable to locate
his or her life insurance policies, there is, unfortunately, no national
or statewide database of all life insurance policies that you can
consult. However, you can try to determine:
-
Look for insurance-related documents.
Search through files, bank safe deposit boxes, and other storage
places to see if there are any insurance-related documents. Also,
look through address books to see if the names of any insurance
agents or companies are listed. An agent or company who sold the
deceased their auto or home insurance may know about the existence
of a life insurance policy.
-
Contact current and prior financial advisors.
Contact current or prior attorneys, accountants, investment
advisors, bankers, business insurance agents/brokers and others who
might have known about the deceased’s life insurance.
-
Review life insurance applications.
The application for each policy is attached to that policy. So if
you can find any of the deceased’s life insurance policies, look at
the applications for them. The application will have a list of all
other life insurance policies owned at the time of the application.
-
Contact previous employers.
Former employers may have a record of a past group policy or
policies.
-
Check bank books and canceled checks.
See if any checks have been made out to life insurance companies
over the years.
-
Check the mail for a year following the death
of the policyholder.
Look for premium notices or dividend notices. If a policy has been
paid up, there will no notice of premium payments due. However, the
company may still send an annual notice regarding the status of the
policy or it may pay or send notice of a dividend.
-
Review the deceased’s income tax returns for
the past two years.
Look for interest income from and interest expenses paid to life
insurance companies. Life insurance companies pay interest on
accumulations on permanent policies and charge interest on policy
loans.
-
Contact all relevant state insurance
departments.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners has a “Life
Insurance Company Location System” to help you find state insurance
department personnel who might help identify companies that might
have written life insurance on the deceased. To access that service,
click
here.
-
Check with the state's unclaimed property
office.
If a life insurance company knows that an insured client has died
but can’t find the beneficiary, it must turn the death benefit over
to the state in which the policy was bought as “unclaimed property.”
If you know (or can guess) where the policy was bought, you can
contact the state comptroller’s department to see if it has any
unclaimed money from life insurance policies belonging to the
deceased.
-
Contact a private service that will search for
“lost life insurance.”
Several private companies will, for a fee, contact insurance
companies for you to find out if the deceased was insured. This
service is often provided through their Web sites.
-
Do you think the life insurance might have
been bought in Canada?
If so, you might contact the Canadian Life and Health Insurance
Association (phone: 1-800-268-8099; Web site: www.clhia.ca).
-
Try the MIB database.
There is a database of all applications for individual
life insurance that were processed during the last nine years. There
is a $75 charge per search. Most searches are not successful: a
random sample of searches found only 1 match in every 5 tries. For
information, click
here.