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How to Find a Deceased Person's Life Insurance Policy (May 2026)

Learn how to find a deceased person's life insurance policy in May 2026. Search NAIC records, state databases, and employer benefits to locate missing policies.

May 28, 2026

Most people have no idea how to find deceased person's life insurance, especially when the deceased never mentioned it or kept spotty records. The process usually starts with the same few pieces of information: a death certificate, Social Security number, and last known location. From there, you're checking a mix of government databases, employer records, and old bank statements for clues that point to a policy.

TLDR:

  • You need the deceased's full name, SSN, date of birth/death, and certified death certificate copies.
  • Check personal files, email, bank statements, and state unclaimed property databases first.
  • The NAIC Policy Locator is free but only covers participating insurers and takes up to 90 days.
  • Sunset searches all life insurance records and reports both matches and confirmed negatives.

What Information You Need to Start Your Search

Before starting your search, gathering the right details upfront saves time across every method you'll use. Most searches require the same core information, so pull everything together before you begin.

Here's what to have on hand:

  • Full legal name of the deceased, including any maiden names or aliases
  • Social Security Number (SSN)
  • Date of birth and date of death
  • Last known location or locations
  • Certified copies of the death certificate

The death certificate comes up constantly. Most insurers and state tools require certified copies instead of photocopies, so request several from the issuing authority when you order.

If the SSN isn't readily available, check prior tax returns, a Social Security card, or old financial statements.

Check Personal Records and Documents

The deceased's own files are often the fastest starting point. Before reaching out to any insurer, go through what they left behind.

A clean, organized desk surface with file folders, documents, and papers spread out being reviewed. Include a safe deposit box key, a checkbook, some opened mail envelopes, and a laptop computer. Warm, natural lighting with a slightly overhead angle. Professional illustration style with muted, trustworthy colors like navy blue and warm gray tones. Focus on the organized search process, conveying thoroughness and care.

Physical spots to check:

  • Filing cabinets and desk drawers for policy documents, premium notices, or letters from insurers
  • Safe deposit boxes, where many people store policies alongside wills and property deeds
  • Checkbooks and bank statements showing recurring payments to an insurance company
  • Incoming mail, which may include renewal notices, dividend statements, or annual policy updates

Digitally:

  • Email inboxes: search terms like "policy," "premium," "life insurance," and "beneficiary" surface a lot
  • Scanned documents or cloud storage folders
  • Tax returns, which sometimes reference premium payments or policy loans

One often-missed spot: the deceased's phone. Many insurers send billing reminders via text, and scrolling back through messages can confirm a carrier name before you've made a single call.

Use the NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator

The NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator is a free government-backed tool that lets you submit a search request for a deceased person's life insurance policies. Participating insurers check their records and contact you directly if they find a match.

A person sitting at a desk using a laptop computer to access an online government database or search tool. Screen shows a professional web interface with search fields and forms. Clean, modern home office setting with natural lighting. View from slightly behind and to the side of the person. Professional illustration style with trustworthy colors like navy blue, gray, and white. Conveys the feeling of using an official, reliable online service. No text or words visible on screen or anywhere in image.

A few things worth knowing before you start:

  • You'll need the deceased's full legal name, Social Security number, date of birth, and date of death.
  • Not every insurer participates, so a no-result doesn't mean no policy exists.
  • The process can take up to 90 days.

It's a reasonable first step, but it covers only participating companies and returns no result if there's no match.

Search MethodCostTimeframeCoverageResults Provided
Personal Records (documents, email, bank statements)FreeImmediate to 1 weekLimited to what the deceased documented or paid forPolicy documents or premium payment records if they exist
NAIC Policy LocatorFreeUp to 90 daysOnly participating insurersInsurer contacts you if match found; no response if none found
State Unclaimed Property DatabasesFreeImmediatePolicies that went unclaimed and escheated to the state (typically after 1-5 years)Shows unclaimed funds held by state; requires searching each state separately
Employer and Professional OrganizationsFree1-2 weeksGroup life insurance through current and former employers, unions, associationsConfirmation of group policy existence and benefit amount
Financial Advisors and Insurance AgentsFreeImmediate to 1 weekPolicies the advisor or agent knows about or soldCarrier name and policy details if they have records
SunsetFree for families1-2 business days (some carriers take 1-2 weeks)All life insurance records in databasePolicy matches or confirmation that no policy was found

Search State Unclaimed Property Databases

When a life insurance policy goes unclaimed long enough, insurers are required to turn those funds over to the state. Most states set the dormancy period at three to five years after the benefit becomes payable, though Arizona and North Dakota require transfer after just one year.

Once funds escheat, they sit in the state's unclaimed property database indefinitely. There are two ways to search:

  • MissingMoney.com covers most states in a single search, making it a good starting point if you're unsure where to look.
  • Individual state treasury websites let you search and file claims directly, which can be useful if MissingMoney.com doesn't return results.

If the deceased lived in multiple states, check each one. Insurers sometimes report funds to the state where the policy was issued, not where the person lived at death.

Contact Employers and Professional Organizations

Group life insurance through an employer is one of the most commonly overlooked policy types. Coverage often comes as a standard workplace benefit, and employees rarely think to document it separately.

Start with the most recent employer, but don't stop there. HR or benefits departments at any previous full-time employer are worth contacting, since some policies stay active after employment.

Beyond employers, check:

  • Labor unions, which frequently provide group life benefits to members
  • Professional associations and trade organizations
  • Military service branches, if the deceased served
  • Alumni or fraternal organizations

Reaching out is usually as simple as calling HR or member services and asking whether a life insurance benefit exists under the deceased's name.

Reach Out to Financial Advisors and Insurance Agents

Financial advisors, accountants, and insurance agents often have a broader view of someone's finances than almost anyone else. If the deceased worked with any of these professionals, one call can sometimes confirm a policy faster than weeks of searching records.

Start with whoever handled their finances most recently. A financial advisor may have recommended a policy directly or knows what coverage existed. An accountant who filed their taxes could have seen premium payments listed. An insurance agent who sold auto or home coverage may have written a life policy too, since agents often consolidate a client's coverage under one carrier.

When you reach out, ask:

  • Did they carry any life insurance policies through you?
  • Do you know which carrier or carriers they used?
  • Are there other advisors or agents I should contact?

That last question matters. People often work with multiple financial professionals, and one name usually leads to another.

Review Bank and Credit Card Statements

Premium payments create a paper trail even when policy documents don't. Search monthly bank statements and credit card records for recurring charges from insurance companies. A partial payee name is enough to call the insurer and confirm whether a policy exists under the deceased's name.

If recent statements come up empty, request several years of bank history. Some policies are fully paid up with no ongoing premiums, so an older charge can still confirm that active coverage exists.

Understanding What Happens to Unclaimed Policies

Insurance companies are legally required to cross-reference the Social Security Death Master File and attempt to contact known beneficiaries when a policyholder dies. In practice, that only works if the insurer has current contact information, and many don't.

The result: billions in unclaimed benefits sit idle each year. If you never knew a policy existed, no notification ever reaches you.

How Sunset Automates Life Insurance Discovery

Sunset searches life insurance records on your behalf so you don't have to contact each insurer one by one. Once you upload a death certificate, Sunset queries its database and returns results whether or not a policy exists.

Here's what the process looks like:

  • Upload the death certificate and provide basic information about the deceased.
  • Sunset searches its life insurance database and cross-references available records.
  • You receive a clear result: either a policy match or confirmation that none was found.

The search is free for families, and you don't need an attorney or financial advisor to get started.

Final Thoughts on Uncovering Unknown Life Insurance Policies

Most people assume finding life insurance for deceased parents or spouses means calling every company until something sticks, but you've got more targeted options than that. Personal documents, bank statements, and employer benefits often hold the fastest answers, while state unclaimed property databases catch policies that went dormant years ago. The NAIC locator helps too, though not every insurer participates. Start a search with Sunset to query life insurance databases without contacting each carrier one by one.

FAQ

How can I find life insurance policies of a deceased parent for free?

Start with the NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator, which searches participating insurers at no cost, or check state unclaimed property databases at MissingMoney.com. Both tools are free, though the NAIC locator can take up to 90 days and only covers participating companies. Sunset offers a free search that covers more insurers and returns results even when no policy is found.

What's the fastest way to search for a deceased person's life insurance without calling dozens of companies?

Sunset automates the search by querying life insurance records once you upload a death certificate. Unlike the NAIC tool, Sunset returns results whether or not a policy exists, so you know you've completed a thorough search. Most results come back within 1-2 business days, though some carriers take 1-2 weeks.

Can I find out if my deceased parent had life insurance through their employer?

Contact the HR or benefits department at their most recent employer and any previous full-time employers. Group life insurance through work is one of the most commonly overlooked policy types, and some policies remain active even after employment ends. Also check any labor unions, professional associations, or military branches they were part of.

What documents do I need to start searching for a deceased person's life insurance?

You need the deceased's full legal name (including any maiden names or aliases), Social Security number, date of birth, date of death, last known locations, and certified copies of the death certificate. Most insurers and state tools require certified copies instead of photocopies, so request several from the issuing authority.

How to find life insurance policies of a deceased parent if the NAIC tool returns no results?

Check the deceased's bank and credit card statements for premium payments to insurance companies, search state unclaimed property databases in every state they lived in, and review personal records like filing cabinets, safe deposit boxes, and email inboxes. Contact any financial advisors, accountants, or insurance agents they worked with, as these professionals often know what coverage existed.

Frequently asked questions

Will financial institution be notified of a Sunset search?

No, we do not notify any financial institutions of the death when performing our searches, except for in the case of life insurance.

Our process combines document review, data integrations, and indirect verification with financial institutions. Families usually discover most accounts within 1 day, although some bank account confirmations take up to two weeks.

Financial institutions are only notified after a request for closure and transfer has been made by you.

Can Sunset help my probate attorney?

Yes. Attorneys regularly recommend Sunset to their clients. Before your attorney can guide you on the right probate path, they need a complete picture of the estate's assets and debts. Sunset generates a comprehensive Estate Asset Inventory with account numbers, balances, and more, giving your attorney exactly what they need to move forward quickly.

How quickly will I see results?

Most results come fast. Here's the general timeline after your account is validated:

  • Within hours: Creditors and debts, some bank accounts, property records (all 50 states), vehicle titles, and unclaimed property
  • 10-12 days: Retirement accounts (401k, IRA, pension), investment accounts (brokerage, stocks, crypto), life insurance, and business ownership.
  • 10–14 days: Comprehensive bank account search with confirmed balances across all account types

Most families have 100% of assets discovered within two weeks.

Who can use Sunset?

Any family member, executor, administrator or personal representative responsible for managing a deceased person’s assets can use our software tool. We support asset search and probate in all 50 states and every county in the U.S.

Am I responsible for their debts?

No, the deceased was solely responsible for their debts. If a loan was backed by a physical asset, such as a home or vehicle, you have options to transfer or payoff from estate proceeds.

For a loan that was jointly held, the responsibility remains with the other person on the account, often a spouse. Sunset automatically identifies if a debt has a living responsible party, and clearly flags it.

What about probate documents?

You can use our software to generate and sometimes file probate documents in every county nationwide.

Online notarization is also available through Sunset.

If your case is unusually complex, or disputed, we recommend hiring experienced probate counsel.

What is an estate bank account? Who controls it?

An estate bank account is a standard bank account in the estate’s name where all funds are consolidated. You can use it to pay expenses, view a full transaction history, and eventually distribute inheritance to beneficiaries.

With one click Sunset can set up an estate bank account.

You control the estate bank account. You can pay bills, taxes, and distribute the funds to heirs.

All estate bank accounts set up by Sunset are FDIC insured and protected from fraud and identity theft.

How can I pay estate expenses?

With your estate bank account you can use to pay expenses to settle your loved ones affairs. You can also reimburse yourself for expenses you may have paid out of pocket before the bank account was set up.

This includes paying for funeral expenses, accountants and attorneys if needed (most families do not need these services when working with us), realtor fees when selling property, money going towards settling debts, money spent fixing up a property before selling it, etc.

How much does Sunset cost?

Sunset Free is free for families settling an estate. Sunset Pro, our paid product for probate attorneys, licensed fiduciaries, trustees, and aftercare specialists, starts at $500 per asset search, with monthly subscription plans available for Solo Practitioners, Small Firms, and Large Firms.

For families, Sunset never charges a fee or takes a percentage of the estate. All family-facing tools are free, including search and discovery, probate document generation, account closure, asset transfer, and estate bank account setup. No upfront fees. No subscriptions. No deductions from the inheritance.

Our revenue from the family side comes from bank partners. They pay us a referral fee when assets transfer to receiving institutions, and we share in the interest while funds sit in the estate bank account. Sunset Pro subscriptions from professionals are how we sustain the rest of the product. All of the deceased's assets go to the beneficiaries and heirs.

What security measures does Sunset have?

Sunset is SOC 2 Type II certified, and we hold ourselves to the highest standards in how we build our software and store data so that you’re always protected. We have in-depth fraud and identity verification measures on the deceased and the beneficiaries, and we run background checks on all employees.