How to find out whether someone had life insurance after they die
Many UK families never claim life insurance payouts simply because they cannot find the policy — here is a methodical way to search.
A solicitor handling an estate once described a pattern she sees several times a year: a family spends months administering a relatively modest estate, closes the final account, and then discovers — by accident, sorting a box of old papers — that the deceased held a life insurance policy worth more than everything else combined. The insurer had heard nothing. The premium had been paid by direct debit for twenty-three years and simply stopped when the bank account was frozen.
This is not unusual. The Association of British Insurers has estimated that hundreds of millions of pounds in life insurance benefits go unclaimed in the UK each year. The policies exist; the premiums were paid; the money is owed. The families just never knew to ask.
Where to begin: paper trails and bank records
The most reliable starting point is the deceased's bank and building society statements. Look for regular outgoing payments — monthly or annually — to insurers or financial services firms. Common names to look for include household names such as Aviva, Legal & General, Scottish Widows, Royal London, and Zurich, but also smaller mutuals, friendly societies, and names that have since been absorbed by larger groups. A payment described as "life assurance", "protection premium", or simply a company name you do not recognise is worth investigating.
If you can access twelve months of statements going back several years, so much the better. Some policies are paid annually in a lump sum, and annual payments are easy to overlook in a single month's transactions.
Beyond bank statements, search methodically through:
- Filing cabinets, desk drawers, and any box files labelled "insurance" or "financial"
- Email inboxes, searching for terms such as "policy schedule", "premium notice", and "renewal"
- Any digital document storage the person used — cloud drives, email attachments, scanned files
- Previous correspondence with a financial adviser or IFA, who may hold records of every product arranged
Employers and pension schemes are frequently overlooked. Many workplace pension arrangements include a death-in-service benefit — sometimes two to four times salary — paid as a lump sum to nominated beneficiaries. This is separate from the pension itself and does not form part of the estate for probate purposes. Contact the HR department or pension scheme administrator directly; they will ask for a death certificate and can confirm whether a nomination was in place.
Group life insurance arranged through professional associations, trade unions, or alumni organisations is another category that families miss. If the deceased was a member of any such body, a brief letter or telephone call to its membership office is worthwhile.
Tracing services when the paper trail runs cold
If the paper search produces nothing conclusive, two specific services exist in the UK to help.
The Unclaimed Assets Register, operated by Experian, holds records of dormant financial assets including life insurance policies where the insurer has lost contact with the policyholder or their estate. A search costs a small fee and covers a broad range of financial institutions. It is not exhaustive — participation by insurers is voluntary — but it is a reasonable systematic step.
The Association of British Insurers' tracing service, administered through the Motor Insurers' Bureau life insurance tracing scheme (often referred to as the MIB life tracing service, though it has operated under various arrangements over time), allows families to submit a single request that is circulated to participating insurers. The insurer will confirm whether it holds a policy in the deceased's name, though it will not disclose the value until legal entitlement is established. This service is free. The ABI website holds current guidance on how to submit a request and which firms participate.
It is also worth writing directly to any insurer whose name appeared on bank statements, even if the specific product is unclear. Provide the deceased's full name, date of birth, last known address, and date of death. Insurers are generally cooperative once a death certificate is provided.
One practical note: if the estate is in probate, some insurers will not release information to anyone other than the named executor or administrator. Having the grant of probate or letters of administration to hand makes every enquiry faster.
The deeper reason families so often fail to claim is structural rather than careless. Life insurance is sold once and then largely ignored. Policy documents are filed and forgotten. Insurers have no legal obligation to proactively search for beneficiaries when premiums stop, though some do make attempts. The premium ceases, the policy lapses or the death benefit simply sits unclaimed in a dormant fund. Without a record somewhere that a policy existed, there is nothing to prompt a search.
The straightforward remedy is to record the existence of every financial product — policy number, insurer, sum assured, and where the original documents are held — somewhere that the people responsible for your estate can actually find it when the time comes.
Glenvault is built precisely for this: a private family vault where policy records, beneficiary nominations, and the location of every relevant document are stored and accessible to those you authorise. Start organising your family's records at glenvault.com/signup.
The private vault for your family
Documents, wealth and succession protocols in one quiet, encrypted home. Start free — no card required.
Sign up to Glenvault


