$107 Million in Lost Life Insurance Policies Found for One State — Here’s How You Can Find Yours in 2026
The Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance (TDCI) announced that over $107 million in insurance policies and benefits was located in 2025 for Tennesseans through the Life Insurance Policy Locator Service — shattering the previous record of $87.67 million set in 2024. The announcement highlights a nationwide problem: billions of dollars in life insurance benefits remain unclaimed because beneficiaries don’t know the policies exist.
Developed by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), the Life Insurance Policy Locator Service is a free tool that helps beneficiaries, executors, and legal representatives find lost life insurance policies and annuity contracts belonging to deceased family members. Since its launch, the service has helped thousands of Americans recover money that would otherwise sit unclaimed indefinitely.
How $107 Million Went Missing — and Was Found
When someone passes away, their life insurance policy doesn’t automatically notify beneficiaries. If family members don’t know the policy exists — or which company issued it — the benefits may never be claimed. In 2025 alone, Tennessee’s program located 20% more in unclaimed benefits than the year before, signaling both growing awareness of the service and the staggering scale of the problem.
“I am encouraged to see that Tennesseans are claiming life insurance benefits as these policies are intended by their purchasers to help cover financial burdens such as medical bills, funeral costs, and other financial obligations,” said TDCI Commissioner Carter Lawrence.
| Year | Benefits Located in Tennessee | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 | $87.67 million | — |
| 2025 | $107.76 million | +23% |
How the NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator Works
The service works by reaching every licensed life insurance company in the United States on your behalf. Here’s the step-by-step process:
- Submit your request — Complete the NAIC’s online Life Insurance Policy Locator Service request form at no cost
- Nationwide search begins — The NAIC sends the deceased person’s information to ALL licensed life insurance companies across the country
- Companies check records — Each insurer searches their database to determine if they hold a policy matching the beneficiary’s information
- Response within 60 days — If a match is found, the company responds directly to you if you are a designated beneficiary or are legally authorized to receive that information
State-by-State: How Much Is Still Missing Nationwide?
While Tennessee’s $107 million figure is staggering for a single state, millions more remain unclaimed across the country. According to the NAIC, the total amount of unclaimed life insurance benefits in the U.S. runs into the billions. Each state maintains its own unclaimed property database, and many states have partnered with the national locator service to help consumers find what they’re owed.
| State | Recent Reported Finds | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tennessee | $107.76 million | 2025 |
| California | $95+ million (est.) | 2024 |
| New York | $80+ million (est.) | 2024 |
| Texas | $70+ million (est.) | 2024 |
Why Life Insurance Policies Go Unclaimed
- No knowledge of the policy — The most common reason: beneficiaries simply don’t know a policy existed
- Lost paperwork — Physical policy documents get misplaced, especially after a move or death
- Company mergers and name changes — Insurers merge or rebrand, making it hard to track down the right company
- Policy lapses before death — Some families assume a lapsed policy means no benefits, when in fact there may be extended or reduced paid-up benefits available
- Outdated beneficiary designations — Life changes like divorce, remarriage, or the death of a named beneficiary can leave policies in legal limbo, making it harder for the right person to claim the benefit
- Demutualization payouts — When mutual insurance companies convert to stock companies, they often issue shares or cash to policyholders. Many policyholders never claim these, and the funds eventually escheat to the state
What to Do If You Think You’re Owed Life Insurance Money
If you believe a deceased family member may have had a life insurance policy you never claimed, TDCI recommends taking these actions:
- Review the deceased’s financial records for any payments made to an insurance company — bank statements, canceled checks, or credit card statements are good places to start
- Check with former employers — many people have group life insurance through work they never told family about
- Search the NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator at no cost
- Check your state’s unclaimed property database — insurance companies are required to turn over unclaimed benefits to state controllers after a certain period
State Unclaimed Property: The Second Place to Look
Beyond the NAIC Policy Locator, every U.S. state maintains an unclaimed property database through their State Treasurer or Controller’s office. Insurance companies are legally required to turn over unclaimed death benefits to these state programs after a dormancy period — typically 3–5 years depending on the state. This means even if the insurer no longer holds the policy, the funds may be sitting in your state’s unclaimed property vault waiting for you to claim them.
According to the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators (NAUPA), state treasuries currently hold over $58 billion in unclaimed property nationwide — including life insurance benefits, forgotten bank accounts, uncashed checks, and safe deposit box contents. Searching is free and takes just minutes: go to MissingMoney.com, the official multi-state unclaimed property search endorsed by NAUPA, enter the deceased’s name, and check every state they ever lived or worked in.
For Tennesseans specifically, the Tennessee Department of Treasury maintains a dedicated unclaimed property division at treasury.tn.gov/unclaimed-property where you can search by name and claim funds with proof of identity and relationship to the deceased.
- Search multiple states — If the deceased lived in, worked in, or had policies issued in multiple states, check each one individually. State databases are not interconnected
- Check under maiden and married names — Especially for older policies purchased before marriage
- Search for both the insured and the beneficiary — Some policies escheat under the beneficiary’s name if the insured predeceased and the insurer couldn’t locate the beneficiary
- File a claim promptly — Most states hold unclaimed property indefinitely, but the sooner you file, the sooner you receive the money
The Bottom Line: Don’t Leave Money on the Table
The TDCI’s $107 million recovery is a powerful reminder that life insurance only works if beneficiaries actually receive the benefits. If you’ve lost a loved one and aren’t sure whether they had coverage, the NAIC’s free locator service takes just minutes to use. You can also call the TDCI Consumer Insurance Service Division at 1-800-342-4029 or visit the NAIC website to start your search.
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