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Post-Retirement

Questions and answers

When you die, the Office of Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance (OFEGLI) will pay life insurance benefits in a particular order, set by law:

  • If you assigned ownership of your life insurance, OFEGLI will pay benefits in the following order of precedence:

      • First to the designated beneficiary(ies) designated by your assignee(s), if any;
      • Second, if there is no such beneficiary, to your assignee(s).
  • If you did not assign ownership and there is a valid court order on file, OFEGLI will pay benefits in accordance with that court order;
  • If you did not assign ownership and there is no valid court order on file, OFEGLI will pay benefits in the following order of precedence:
      • First, to the beneficiary you designated;
      • Second, if there is no such beneficiary, to your widow or widower;
      • Third, if none of the above, to your child or children, with the share of any deceased child distributed among the descendants of that child (a court will usually have to appoint a guardian to receive payment for a minor child);
      • Fourth, if none of the above, to your parents in equal shares or the entire amount to your surviving parent;
      • Fifth, if none of the above, to the executor or administrator of your estate; or
      • Sixth, if none of the above, to your other next of kin as determined under the laws of the State where you lived.

You can download the Standard Form (SF) 2823 [119 KB], Designation of Beneficiary, and instructions, or contact us and ask that they be sent to you.

You need to keep your designated beneficiaries' addresses current. Failure to do so may mean that your beneficiary cannot be located and therefore benefits will not be paid to that person. The preferred way is to file a new Designation of Beneficiary when a beneficiary's address changes. A new address cannot be added directly to the Designation of Beneficiary form itself, since any cross outs, erasures, or alterations in your form may make it invalid.

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