I have been looking at life insurance that will cover suicide. It appears that most companies that provide this product require the policy to be held for 13 months before the cover of suicide comes into effect. Does anyone have this type of life insurance? I am curious to whether you have to disclose any mental health diagnosis, treatment or past suicide attempts or if there may be any other fine print that may stop a payout on one of these policies?
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Good grief, I didn’t even know such a thing existed! No idea about the terms and conditions, sorry.
What the policy requires you to reveal and what they offer varies from policy to policy and insurance company to insurance company, so you simply have to inquire of each one. Please make sure that you also check your state laws concerning things like this.
I should add: there are many specific details in a policy and also laws that cover life insurance. Don’t assume anything – ask.
I cancelled my life insurance a couple of months ago. When I took the policy out my doctor declared a short period of depression from 20 years ago. A death by suicide following depression would not pay out for me.
And thus I have decided not to kill you.
Lucky dog! 😉
You disclosed it and they still gave you the policy? Was that because the diagnosis was too old to consider? Why would it have been denied if you (or your doctor) disclosed the condition? This is the first time I have ever encounteted this situation so I am just curious. Hope you don’t mind my asking.
I found some good info on this. It appears that each case is assessed individually and you must disclose every medical condition that you have had. Most insurance companies will have these 2 clauses in the policy.
1. The “suicide clause.” Usually, this clause states that no death benefit will be paid if the insured commits suicide within two years of taking out a policy.
2. The “incontestability clause”. This clause says that if the insured person made misstatements on the policy application, and dies within two years, the company can decline to pay the death claim. After that, the policy is “incontestable” except in cases of outright fraud.
Just as with the suicide clause, the clock on the incontestability clause is reset whenever someone replaces his or her existing policy with a new one.
Families may have to fight
There are plenty of examples where family members had to go to court to collect insurance benefits. Heath Ledger, who played the Joker in the movie The Dark Knight, died in early 2008, just seven months after he took out a $10 million life insurance policy. The New York Medical Examiner’s office ruled that the death was an “accident, resulting from the abuse of prescribed medications.” This raised two questions. Was the death a suicide? And did Ledger have a drug habit that wasn’t disclosed on his policy application?
The insurer, ReliaStar Life Insurance Co., launched an investigation into these questions, rather than paying the death claim immediately. In response, lawyers for Ledger’s young daughter Matilda filed a lawsuit. The case was settled for an undisclosed amount that was less than the full $10 million.
In a less prominent case, Todd Pierce of Montana, who had been fighting cancer for several years, died in a car crash in 2009. The sheriff’s department called it accidental death, and Pierce’s family filed a claim for $224,000 under an accidental death policy he had received through work.
The insurer, Metropolitan Life, denied the claim on the grounds that Pierce had committed suicide. Jane Pierce, Todd’s widow, sued the following year and the claim was eventually paid.
Whenever an insured person replaces an existing life insurance policy with a new one, the time clock for the suicide clause is set back to zero and starts over again.
In my state, the law sets a different amount of time for the suicide clause than the majority of policies.
Thank you for posting such good information.
Thanks Mike, this is very interesting. I always assumed suicide meant no pay.
We needs to sign up people on SP that are seriously depressed but probably won’t kill themselves for two years. We could be rich!!!!
Of course, people around here might get offended when I start saying things like, “you gave it all you had for two years but I just don’t think you are going to get better. Maybe you should reconsider killing yourself?”
Money will not help me so I’ll volunteer to go first. If I continue to remain in this dissociative, depersonalized state, I could possibly hold on for 2 more years. That can be my contribution to society.