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Indefinitely or until the contingent is found and paid.
A Contingent or Secondary Beneficiary will receive the proceeds from a life insurance policy after the Insured's deaths, if the Primary Beneficiary does not survive the Insured Person. This means, if the primary beneficiary is not alive at the time of death of the insured person, then the contingent beneficiary will receive the proceeds from the life insurance policy. Examples of situations which may give rise to the contingent beneficiary receiving the proceeds from a life insurance policy. 1. The insured and primary beneficiary die in an accident together, for example, a car accident. 2. The primary beneciairy dies, and the insured forgets to update the beneficiaries for his/her life insurance policy.
A Contingent or Secondary Beneficiary will receive the proceeds from a life insurance policy after the Insured's deaths, if the Primary Beneficiary does not survive the Insured Person. This means, if the primary beneficiary is not alive at the time of death of the insured person, then the contingent beneficiary will receive the proceeds from the life insurance policy. Examples of situations which may give rise to the contingent beneficiary receiving the proceeds from a life insurance policy. 1. The insured and primary beneficiary die in an accident together, for example, a car accident. 2. The primary beneciairy dies, and the insured forgets to update the beneficiaries for his/her life insurance policy.
A successor typically becomes the beneficiary of a life insurance policy if the original beneficiary is deceased at the time of the policyholder's death. The successor would be entitled to the policy's proceeds just like the original beneficiary, as specified in the policy contract.
no there is no limit
Think of it as Primary and Contingent. If the Primary deceases before or with you the benefits would go to the contingent or secondary. Obviously if the primary deceased you would want to change your beneficiary assignment at that time. 4LifeGuild
If the beneficiary of a policy has died, the estate of the beneficiary can still collect the insurance payment, assuming that the beneficiary does have an heir or heirs of some kind (as most people do). Note that this is a fairly unusual situation, because normally when a beneficiary dies, a new beneficiary is named. There is no reason to allow the policy to have no living beneficiary, unless the insured and the beneficiary happen to die at about the same time, and there is no time to name a new beneficiary.
Eighteen.
There is no time frame limit when a beneficiary needs to file for life insurance benefits. All you need to do is notify the life insurance company and provide copy of death certificate, and if the policy was in force at the time of death, a benefit will be paid to the beneficiary.
The time limit to collect an unpaid bill depends on the kind of the bill it is and what state you are in. In most cases the bill can be collected forever, but you cannot pursue legal action beyond 7 years.
Yes, after the estate has been probated, the time has expired.
I assume the policy holder is the insured? Has the insured died? If not, It is time to change beneficiaries. Seek out the help of your agent to make sure you choose a properly named beneficiary. If the insured has died, there would have been a contingent beneficiary. All you need to do is contact the claims department of the insureds insurance company. If you are not the policy owner or the beneficiary, you are going to be limited in what info you can obtain but you can initiate the claim. 4lifeguild