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What are life settlements?

What are life settlements?

A life settlement is the sale of your life insurance policy to a third party for less than the full death benefit. The buyer becomes the new owner and/or the beneficiary of the life insurance policy, pays all future premiums, and collects the entire death benefit when you die.

  • Do I still need my insurance?
  • Have I discussed all my ​choices with my financial adviser and my insurance company or agent? For example: Do I have cash value in my policy that I can use to pay premiums or an accelerated death benefit? Can I get a loan to pay premiums, or will my beneficiaries help with making premium payments to protect their interest?
  • Will this limit my ability to buy additional life insurance in the future?
  • If I sell my policy, how much cash will I get?
  • Is my life insurance provided by an employer or other group policy? Can I sell my policy? Am I really the owner or just a certificate holder in a group policy?
  • If I sell my policy, who will be the legal owner? Will the policy be resold?
  • If my policy is resold, what personal or medical information can be shared with the purchasers? How often will they request my medical information? Will I be required to sign releases allowing them to contact my medical providers or family members for my health information?
  • Is the broker or company I plan to work with licensed to do business in Oregon?​
  • You may have to pay state/federal income taxes on some or all of your settlement money. It is important to consult a tax professional.
  • Creditors may be able to make claims on the proceeds from your life settlement.
  • A cash settlement may affect your eligibility for some government programs, such as food stamps or Medicaid.
  • Your policy could be resold multiple times and future owners may have the ability to track your health.​
  • You can contact life settlement companies directly or choose a broker to help you shop for the highest cash settlement.
  • You complete an application and sign a release allowing the potential buyer to use your medical records to evaluate your life expectancy.
  • You select the best offer.
  • Once you accept an offer, an escrow account is set up. The account holds the purchaser’s money and your life insurance policy until the documents that change ownership of the policy and the beneficiary have been received and processed by the insurance company. This protects you and the buyer of your life insurance.
  • You will get your cash within three business days after the life settlement company gets written proof that the changes in policy ownership and beneficiary have been processed by the life insurance company.
  • You can change your mind about the settlement within 60 days from the date of the life settlement contract or 30 days after you are paid, whichever is earlier. If you cancel the settlement, you must return the cash settlement plus any premiums the buyer paid. If you die within this period, the life settlement sale is off. Your beneficiaries receive the death benefit. They must return any cash settlement funds received plus any premiums the buyer paid.
  • Your contract may require you to allow future owners of your policy to regularly contact you to check your health status.
  • If you don’t use a life settlement broker to sell your policy, you should contact more than one company.
  • You do not have to accept any life settlement offer. It is your contract; it may be worth more if sold when you are older.
  • If you learn that you are terminally ill, your estate (instead of investors) could benefit from the tax-free death benefit provided by life insurance. This benefit would not be available under a life settlement contract.
  • If you are terminally or chronically ill, Oregon law requires that buyers of your policy pay you a minimum amount based on your life expectancy and the face value of your policy. Contact the Insurance Division at 1-888-877-4894 (toll-free) to learn more.
  • Check all application forms for accuracy, especially personal and medical information that you provide. Truthfully answer all questions.
  • Contact the Oregon Insurance Division if:
  • You are offered money or gifts to purchase insurance
  • You are off​ered free insurance for a period of time
  • You are asked to buy insurance to sell to investors
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Be wary, also, of offers to loan you money to buy life insurance. For example, someone may offer you “free life insurance” for five years. Find out what strings are attached.

What happens after the five years? Will you have to repay the loan with interest to keep the policy for your beneficiary? If you can’t pay back the loan, will someone else own your life insurance and get the death benefit?

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