Skip to content
How Divorce Affects Your Life Insurance Policy
Life Insurance Guides

How Divorce Affects Your Life Insurance Policy

4 min readBy TermHaven Team
Last updated:Published:

Learn how divorce affects your life insurance policy. Covers beneficiary changes, court-ordered coverage, cash value division, and getting new coverage after divorce.

How Divorce Affects Your Life Insurance Policy

Divorce changes nearly every aspect of your financial life, and life insurance is no exception. From beneficiary designations to court-ordered coverage requirements, there are critical steps to take during and after a divorce to protect yourself, your children, and your financial future.

Failing to address life insurance during divorce is one of the most common — and most costly — oversights in divorce proceedings.

Immediate Steps: Beneficiary Designations

Free Life Insurance newsletter

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

The first and most urgent action is reviewing your beneficiary designations. If your ex-spouse is named as the beneficiary on your life insurance policy and you die without changing it, the death benefit goes to them — regardless of what your divorce decree says.

In most states, divorce does not automatically revoke a beneficiary designation on a life insurance policy. This is different from wills, where many states have "revocation upon divorce" laws. Life insurance beneficiary designations are governed by contract law, and the designation on file with the insurer controls.

Action item: Contact your insurance company immediately and update your beneficiary designation. Name your children, a trust, or another appropriate person or entity.

Exception: If your divorce decree requires you to maintain life insurance with your ex-spouse as beneficiary (common when child support or alimony is ordered), you cannot change the designation without violating the court order.

Court-Ordered Life Insurance

Family courts frequently require one or both spouses to maintain life insurance as part of the divorce settlement. This is most common when:

Child Support Obligations

If you are ordered to pay child support, the court may require you to maintain a life insurance policy with your children (or their custodial parent) as beneficiaries. The coverage amount is typically equal to the total remaining child support obligation.

Example: $2,000 per month in child support for 12 remaining years = $288,000 in required coverage.

Alimony (Spousal Support)

Similarly, if you pay alimony, the court may require coverage equal to the total remaining alimony payments. Some decrees allow the coverage to decrease over time as the remaining obligation shrinks.

Property Settlement Notes

If you owe your ex-spouse a property settlement paid over time (for example, buying out their share of the home), the court may require life insurance to secure that obligation.

What Happens to Existing Policies in Divorce

Individually Owned Policies

If you own a term life policy, it typically remains your property. The cash surrender value of a term policy is zero, so there is nothing to divide.

If you own a whole life or universal life policy with cash value, that cash value is a marital asset subject to division. Options include:

  • One spouse keeps the policy and offsets the other spouse's share with other assets
  • The policy is surrendered and the cash value is split (potentially triggering a taxable event)
  • The policy is split into two smaller policies (some insurers allow this)

Jointly Owned Policies

Joint life insurance policies must be addressed in the divorce agreement. Options include converting to individual policies, surrendering the policy, or one spouse buying out the other's interest.

Employer Group Policies

You may be required to maintain your employer group life insurance with your ex-spouse or children as beneficiaries. Be aware that if you change jobs, you may lose this coverage and need to replace it with an individual policy.

Getting New Coverage After Divorce

Divorce often creates new life insurance needs:

Protecting your children. If you are the custodial parent, you need life insurance to ensure your children are cared for if you pass away. Coverage should fund childcare, education, and living expenses through adulthood.

Replacing lost coverage. If your ex-spouse's life insurance previously covered you as a beneficiary, you no longer have that protection.

Securing your own financial future. Single-income households are more vulnerable. A life insurance policy protects against the loss of your income, especially if you have dependents.

Meeting court requirements. If the divorce decree requires coverage, you need a policy that meets the specified amount and duration.

Tips for Post-Divorce Coverage

Buy your own policy as soon as possible. Divorce is stressful, and life insurance often falls to the bottom of the priority list. But your age increases every day you wait, and premiums go up accordingly.

Consider term life insurance matched to the duration of your financial obligations. If child support runs for 15 years, a 15 or 20-year term policy is a natural fit.

Name a trust as beneficiary for policies intended to benefit your children. Naming minor children directly as beneficiaries creates legal complications — a court-appointed guardian would manage the funds. A trust gives you control over how and when the money is distributed.

Keep proof of coverage. If the divorce decree requires you to maintain insurance, keep your ex-spouse informed of the policy details and provide annual proof of coverage. This prevents disputes and potential contempt-of-court issues.

Protecting Yourself: Requiring Your Ex-Spouse to Maintain Coverage

If you are receiving child support or alimony, insist that the divorce agreement requires your ex-spouse to maintain life insurance:

  • Specify the coverage amount and duration in the decree
  • Require that you be named as beneficiary (or as trustee for the children)
  • Require annual proof that the policy is in force and premiums are current
  • Include a provision that allows you to pay premiums if your ex-spouse stops paying, with reimbursement through the court

Without these protections, your ex-spouse could let the policy lapse, leaving you and your children unprotected.

The Bottom Line

Divorce requires a complete reassessment of your life insurance needs. Update your beneficiaries, comply with court orders, replace lost coverage, and protect your financial independence.

Get a free quote to see rates for post-divorce coverage. Use our coverage calculator to determine the right amount, or browse our resources for more financial planning guidance.

Affiliate Disclosure

This article may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you.
#divorce
#beneficiaries
#court-ordered
#family-law

Discussion

Sign in with GitHub to leave a comment. Your replies are stored on this site's public discussion board.

🛡️

Free Download

Life Insurance Buyer's Guide

Plain-English guide to term vs whole life insurance: how much coverage you actually need, the 5 questions agents hope you never ask, and how to compare quotes without getting upsold.

Rated #1 by independent reviewers

Download Free Guide
Newsletter

Stay in the Loop

Get the latest Life Insurance reviews, deals, and expert tips delivered straight to your inbox.

Join readers who get the inside track first.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Privacy Policy.

More Articles