{4:00 minutes to read} Life insurance is not a topic most people are eager to speak about, let alone if you are separating. But life insurance is a topic you should be prepared to discuss in your mediation.
Under New York law, a judge may order a party to obtain and maintain life insurance coverage naming as beneficiaries either the children (for child support) or the spouse (for maintenance) for so long as the party is obligated to pay child support and/or maintenance.
While you don’t have a judge making orders in mediation, you do want to be sure that there are provisions for life insurance in your agreement if spousal or child support are being paid.
Here are some things for you to consider:
Naming the beneficiary
However, you may not feel comfortable naming the spouse as beneficiary. And even if you have the utmost trust and confidence that the spouse will use those funds solely for the children, unexpected things could happen, such as if your spouse remarries without a prenuptial agreement or dies without appointing someone to take care of the children — and the funds meant to support them. Events of this type would put those funds at risk.
In Part II, I will address options if you are unable to obtain life insurance and why it’s important for both of you to have it, even if only one of you is paying child support.