Quick Answer
What happens to your life insurance after divorce depends on your state, your policy type, and your divorce decree. In some states, divorce automatically removes your ex-spouse as beneficiary. In others, the old beneficiary designation stays in place until you actively change it, meaning your ex could still collect the death benefit even after the marriage legally ends.
- State law split: Roughly 26 states automatically revoke an ex-spouse’s beneficiary status upon divorce. The remaining states do not, leaving the prior designation in force.
- Workplace policies are different: Employer-provided group life insurance is governed by federal ERISA law, which overrides state automatic revocation rules in most cases.
- Court orders can require coverage: If you owe alimony or child support, a judge may legally require you to keep a policy in place naming your ex or children as beneficiary.
- Cash value can be a marital asset: The cash value built up in a permanent policy during the marriage may need to be divided as part of the divorce settlement.
Divorce reshapes nearly every financial document in your life, and life insurance is one of the most overlooked. Roughly 2,400 divorces are finalized every day in the United States, and in a striking number of those cases, nobody updates the beneficiary form sitting in a filing cabinet or an old email from an insurance agent. Years later, a death benefit can end up going to an ex-spouse nobody intended to benefit, or a court can determine that a policy never got set up the way the divorce decree required.
This guide walks through exactly what happens to life insurance after a divorce, why the answer depends heavily on which state you live in, what role your divorce decree plays, and the steps you need to take immediately after your divorce is finalized to make sure your policy reflects your actual wishes.
- The Big Picture: Does Divorce Automatically Change Your Beneficiary
- State by State: Automatic Revocation vs No Change
- Why Employer Life Insurance Plays By Different Rules
- When a Court Can Force You to Keep a Policy
- Is Life Insurance Cash Value a Marital Asset
- How Different Policy Types Are Handled
- Real Disputes: What the Data Shows
- 2026 News and Legal Developments
- Post-Divorce Checklist for Your Policy
- Frequently Asked Questions
The Big Picture: Does Divorce Automatically Change Your Beneficiary
Many people assume that getting divorced automatically removes their ex-spouse from every account and policy they once shared. That assumption is only sometimes correct, and getting it wrong can be expensive. Life insurance is a contract, and contract law, not personal intent or fairness, generally decides who gets paid when the policyholder dies.
Two separate legal systems can apply to the same question, depending on what kind of policy you hold. State law governs most individually purchased policies. Federal law, specifically ERISA, governs most employer-sponsored group policies. The rules in each system can produce completely different outcomes for two people in the same state who simply have different types of coverage.
State by State: Automatic Revocation vs No Change
More than 40 states have some form of law addressing what happens to beneficiary designations after divorce, but they do not all work the same way. About 26 states have what is called a revocation upon divorce statute, which automatically removes an ex-spouse as a named beneficiary the moment a divorce is finalized. The remaining states leave the existing designation untouched unless the policyholder actively files a change.
States that generally apply some form of automatic revocation to non-probate assets, which often includes individually owned life insurance, include Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and Virginia, among others.
California is a notable exception worth highlighting. Even though California has revocation upon divorce statutes for many other non-probate assets, the law specifically excludes life insurance policies from automatic revocation. That means in California, a former spouse named as beneficiary before or during the marriage generally remains the beneficiary after divorce unless the policyholder actively changes the designation or the divorce decree says otherwise.
Why Employer Life Insurance Plays By Different Rules
If your life insurance came through your job, the rules change substantially. Group life insurance plans offered through an employer are typically governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, a federal law that overrides, or preempts, state automatic revocation statutes in most situations.
This is not a minor technicality. In the landmark case Egelhoff v. Egelhoff, the Supreme Court ruled that divorce alone does not change an ERISA-governed beneficiary designation, even in a state with a strong automatic revocation law. If a plan administrator has an ex-spouse listed as the beneficiary on file, federal law generally requires the administrator to pay that ex-spouse, regardless of what the divorce decree says, unless a specific, properly executed legal mechanism changes that outcome.
The only reliable way to remove an ex-spouse from an ERISA-governed plan is to submit a new, valid beneficiary designation form directly to the plan administrator after the divorce is final. A divorce decree alone, even one that explicitly states the ex-spouse should be removed, is often not enough on its own to change what the plan administrator is legally required to do.
When a Court Can Force You to Keep a Policy
It may seem counterintuitive, but many divorce decrees actually require a policyholder to keep their ex-spouse listed as a beneficiary, at least temporarily. This usually happens when one spouse owes ongoing financial obligations to the other.
Courts frequently mandate life insurance to secure alimony and child support obligations in divorce settlements. The idea is straightforward: if the paying spouse dies before finishing those payments, the life insurance death benefit replaces the lost support so the receiving spouse and children are not left without the money the court ordered.
The judge looks at remaining alimony or child support payments owed by one spouse to determine the financial risk if that spouse were to pass away early.
The required death benefit is typically tied to the total remaining obligation, such as the years of child support left or the alimony term specified in the settlement.
Before ordering coverage, courts generally must find that the required insurance is actually available to the paying spouse and that the cost is reasonable given their income.
The decree typically names the receiving spouse or children as the required beneficiary, and that designation generally cannot be changed without violating the court order.
If you are required to maintain life insurance for an ex-spouse or children under a divorce decree, removing them as beneficiary without court approval can expose you to a contempt of court finding, even in a state where automatic revocation would otherwise apply.
Is Life Insurance Cash Value a Marital Asset
Term life insurance has no cash value, so this issue mainly applies to permanent policies such as whole life or universal life. If a permanent policy was purchased, or premiums were paid into it, during the marriage, the cash value that built up during that period is often treated as a marital asset subject to division, even if only one spouse is the named insured.
| Scenario | Typical Treatment of Cash Value |
|---|---|
| Policy purchased before marriage, premiums paid during marriage | Growth during the marriage is often divisible; pre-marriage value may remain separate |
| Policy purchased and fully paid during the marriage | Generally treated as a marital asset subject to division |
| Policy purchased after separation with separate income | Usually treated as separate property, depending on state law |
| Term life insurance, no cash value | No cash value to divide, though the policy and its beneficiary still need review |
Some states require both spouses to disclose every life insurance policy they hold, including type, coverage amount, riders, and current cash value, as part of the financial disclosures in a divorce. A handful of states even require a formal Affidavit of Insurance Coverage to make sure nothing is hidden or overlooked during settlement negotiations.
How Different Policy Types Are Handled
Individual Term or Permanent Policies
These are typically purchased directly from an insurer and owned solely by one spouse. They are governed by state law, which means the outcome depends heavily on whether your state has an automatic revocation statute and whether life insurance is included in that statute, as the California exception shows is not always guaranteed.
Employer-Sponsored Group Policies
As discussed above, these fall under ERISA and are not affected by state automatic revocation laws in most circumstances. A new beneficiary form filed directly with the plan administrator is the most reliable way to make a change.
Joint Life Insurance Policies
Joint policies, which cover two people under a single contract, require mutual agreement to change. Neither spouse can cancel, modify, or redirect the policy unilaterally without the other’s consent or a court order. Many divorcing couples choose to split a joint policy into two individual policies, when the insurer allows it, or have one spouse take over sole ownership under negotiated terms.
Policies With Qualified Domestic Relations Orders
In some cases, a divorce decree can be structured as a Qualified Domestic Relations Order, or QDRO, which is a specific legal mechanism that can require an ERISA plan administrator to honor the divorce decree’s terms even over a conflicting beneficiary form. This is a complex area of law that generally requires an attorney experienced in QDRO drafting.
Real Disputes: What the Data Shows
Beneficiary disputes after divorce are common enough that they form a recurring category of litigation. The typical fact pattern looks the same across many cases: a person divorces, sometimes remarries, and dies without ever updating an old beneficiary form. The family is often shocked to learn that fairness and intent do not automatically decide who gets paid.
When an insurer is unsure who is legally entitled to the proceeds, it sometimes files what is called an interpleader lawsuit, depositing the death benefit with the court and asking a judge to decide who should receive it. This can delay payment for months or longer while the matter works through the legal system, adding stress to families during an already difficult time.
2026 News and Legal Developments
Family law and insurance attorneys continue to report a steady stream of disputes in 2026 involving ex-spouses listed as beneficiaries on employer-sponsored group life insurance plans, with courts repeatedly affirming that ERISA preemption applies even when a state revocation statute would otherwise remove the ex-spouse.
Family law data tracked into 2026 continues to show a rising share of divorces among older couples, a pattern often called gray divorce, which tends to involve more complex life insurance, retirement, and healthcare planning questions than divorces earlier in life.
Recent family law industry data shows a majority of divorce cases now involve at least one self-represented party, which increases the risk that beneficiary designation issues on life insurance policies go unaddressed during settlement negotiations.
Courts in states with automatic revocation statutes continue to cite the Supreme Court’s 2018 ruling in Sveen v. Melin as binding precedent in 2026 cases, reinforcing that these state laws remain constitutional and enforceable for non-ERISA policies.
Post-Divorce Checklist for Your Policy
- Identify every policy you hold. List all individual and employer-provided life insurance policies, including coverage amount, type, and current beneficiary on file.
- Determine which law applies. Confirm whether each policy is individually owned, which is governed by state law, or employer-sponsored, which is governed by ERISA.
- Re-read your divorce decree carefully. Check whether the decree requires you to maintain coverage for an ex-spouse or children, and note any required beneficiary or coverage amount.
- Contact each insurer or plan administrator directly. Do not assume your state’s automatic revocation law applies to every policy you own, especially workplace coverage.
- File a new beneficiary designation form if appropriate. If you are legally free to change your beneficiary, submit the paperwork directly rather than relying on the divorce decree alone.
- Update contingent beneficiaries too. Make sure backup beneficiaries reflect your current wishes, not outdated relationships.
- Consult a divorce attorney before making changes. Confirm that any change you make does not violate your settlement agreement or a court order.
- Reassess your coverage needs. Divorce often changes how much life insurance you actually need, especially if your support obligations or dependents have changed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Not necessarily. A divorce decree is a court order, but the insurer or plan administrator still pays according to the most recent valid beneficiary designation on file unless state law automatically revokes it or a specific legal mechanism is used to enforce the decree’s terms.
In most cases yes, as long as your divorce settlement does not require you to keep them listed due to alimony or child support obligations. Always confirm with your divorce attorney before making the change.
Naming a minor child directly as beneficiary can create complications, since most states prohibit minors from accepting a death benefit payout directly. Many parents instead use a trust or an adult custodian arrangement so the funds can be properly managed for the child’s benefit.
Yes. Term policies only involve a beneficiary designation question, since there is no cash value. Permanent policies involve both a beneficiary question and a potential cash value division question as part of the marital asset settlement.
This is one of the most common and costly mistakes. Depending on your state and policy type, your ex-spouse could still be entitled to the death benefit even after you remarry, leaving your current spouse without the coverage you may have assumed they had.
Sometimes. If your support obligations, dependents, or financial picture changed significantly, a new policy sized to your current needs may make more sense than simply changing the beneficiary on an old one. A licensed insurance professional can help you compare options.








