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MAIN
Your
Money Insurance
How
to Protect Your Life Insurance Policy ...
While Going Through a Divorce
Life insurance,
more than most things you buy, relates to the circumstances of
your life. You buy life insurance to protect your family from
financial loss stemming from your death. You tie the amount of
your life insurance to the money your family will need to provide
an income, pay off debts, put children through college and cover
financial commitments.
But what happens
to life insurance when you're about to dissolve your marriage?
How do you deal fairly with a soon-to-be ex-spouse, yet still
make sure you have coverage for the future? Is there a way to
provide for adult children of a previous marriage without going
broke -- especially if you have children through a second or third
marriage?
Here are a
number of considerations you should be aware of:
- Don't
assume that your insurance agent or company knows about your
circumstances. If you don't change your beneficiary, your
former spouse may receive the proceeds of your policy upon your
death. If the designation simply reads, husband of the
insured or wife of the insured, and there
is no new spouse, the secondary beneficiary receives the proceeds.
- You may
be able to transfer ownership rights of the policy as part of
a property settlement or to ensure continuation of alimony payments.
Your ex-spouse may not press as hard for more support or a greater
slice of an ongoing pension if he or she remains the designated
beneficiary on a permanent life insurance policy. Of course,
you need to ensure that your policy remains a valuable asset
by keeping up premium payments.
However,
transferring an existing cash value policy (as opposed to a
term policy, may carry with it the burden of federal gift tax,
unless you transfer the policy prior to divorce. Be sure to
discuss this option prior to the finalization of your divorce.
- Don't
overlook the possibilities life insurance may provide for dealing
fairly with children from your previous marriage. If you're
paying alimony to your previous spouse and have a second family
with your new spouse, adult children from your first marriage
may sue your estate after you're gone if they aren't
dealt with at least as fairly as the children from your subsequent
marriage(s).
A permanent
life insurance policy can be an immediate "estate replacer"
to children from your first marriage -- it helps you replicate
accumulated assets that you wish to pass on to the children of
your first family -- but can't afford to without neglecting
the needs of your new family. Essentially, you purchase a permanent
life insurance policy on yourself and designate your adult children
as beneficiaries. When you die, proceeds bypass the probate process
and pass directly to your adult children. Your immediate spouse
and any children from that marriage are left with your accumulated
property and assets -- so you've provided for both families.
If you're
contemplating divorce, don't forget the options you may have
with respect to your life insurance coverage. Divorce is tough
enough -- don't overlook the flexibility and security this
valuable asset can provide.
About
the Author...
Matt
McWilliams is one of the co-founders of HometownQuotes.Com, an
online insurance quotes web site. He is originally from Pinebluff,
NC and graduated from Middle Tennessee State University in 2002.
He is considered an expert in the field of online insurance shopping
and finding new ways to help consumers save money on their insurance.
For more information visit http://www.hometownquotes.com.
Related
Sites of Interest:
Divorce
and Insurance
Insurance
coverage that one should have when divorcing
Why
a split can leave you with a financial headache
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