
BENEFICIARY
A beneficiary is the person or entity you name in a
life insurance policy to receive the death benefit. You can name:
V One person
V Two or more people
V The trustee of a trust
you've set up
V A charity
V Your estate
Beneficiaries:
Life insurance policy should have both "primary" and
"contingent" beneficiaries. The primary beneficiary gets the death benefits
if he or she can be found after your death. Contingent beneficiaries get
the death benefits if the primary beneficiary can't be found. If no primary
or contingent beneficiaries can be found, the death benefit will be paid
to your estate.
As part of naming beneficiaries, you should identify them
as clearly as possible and include their social security numbers. This
will make it easier for the life insurance company to find them, and it
will make it less likely that disputes will arise concerning the death
benefits. For example, if you write "wife [or husband] of the insured"
without using a specific name, an ex-spouse could claim the death benefit.
On the other hand, if you have named specific children, any later-born
or adopted children will not receive the death benefit-unless you
change the beneficiary designation to include them.
Besides naming beneficiaries, you should give how the
benefits are to be handled if one or more beneficiaries can't be found.
For example, suppose you have two children and you name each one to accept
half of the death benefit. If one of the children dies before you do,
do you want the other child to get the entire death benefit, or the deceased
child's heirs to get his or her share. If the death benefit goes to your
estate, probate proceedings could delay distributing the money, and the
cost of probate could diminish the amount available to your heirs.
For more informations on our services contact insurance
brokers John Good|
Kelly Good
|