Korea insurers struggle to reduce unclaimed policy benefits

Nine years of government outreach have not moved Korea's unclaimed benefits recovery rate beyond 30%

Korea insurers struggle to reduce unclaimed policy benefits

Insurance News

By Roxanne Libatique

South Korea’s insurers are carrying more than KRW10 trillion (approximately US$6.5 billion) in benefits that policyholders have never collected – and nearly a decade of government-led outreach has not moved the annual recovery rate beyond roughly 30%.

The Financial Services Commission (FSC) and the insurance industry announced on July 7 that they will target the return of KRW10.3 trillion in unclaimed benefits to policyholders and beneficiaries in 2026, The Chosun Daily reported. In 2025, about 800,000 cases worth KRW3.247 trillion were returned to consumers at an average of KRW4.04 million per case – yet only around 30% of the total unclaimed pool is recovered annually, according to the report.

That ratio has changed little since the campaign began. The FSC returned KRW3.9 trillion in 2022 against KRW12.4 trillion identified as still outstanding, a recovery rate of roughly 31%. The 2025 figures imply a similar outcome. Since 2017, more than KRW16.8 trillion in dormant insurance money has been returned to policyholders, according to the FSC – a significant cumulative total, but one that has not closed the structural gap between benefits confirmed for payment and amounts actually claimed.

What sits in the pool

Unclaimed benefits are funds confirmed for payment but never collected, typically because policyholders do not know a payment has been triggered or beneficiaries fail to file claims, The Chosun Daily reported. Retirement pension savings abandoned after a business closure are another recurring source. Of the amounts returned in 2025, mid-term benefits accounted for the largest share at KRW1.8992 trillion. These cover payments tied to life events or age milestones, including payouts for childbirth, school enrolment, education funds, and medical examination benefits. Maturity benefits, which accrue interest for up to three years after policy expiration, totalled KRW1.1394 trillion. Death benefits accounted for KRW61.9 billion, frequently unclaimed because beneficiaries were unaware the policyholder had died or that a policy existed.

Why the gap persists

The Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) has identified a key obstacle to returning unclaimed benefits. The watchdog noted in April 2026 that some refunds remain incomplete even after insurers notify affected customers, largely because contact information is outdated or policyholders do not respond to calls or notices. More broadly, insurance remains the largest source of complaints received by the FSS, accounting for 49% of the 128,419 financial complaints handled in the most recent reported year. The regulator also reported that the average processing time for financial complaints increased to 46.6 days, according to Seoul Economic Daily.

The 2026 campaign attempts to address the contact problem at its source. Insurers will verify policyholders’ latest addresses through the Ministry of the Interior and Safety and contact them individually by mail, mobile electronic notice, or phone from July. The Korea Inclusive Finance Agency (KINFA) will run parallel awareness efforts on YouTube and other platforms. Individual carriers are also acting: NH Nonghyup Life Insurance launched its own customer asset recovery campaign in December 2025, targeting dormant benefits, unclaimed annuities, maturity payouts, and instalment benefits, with claims processed immediately upon application across multiple channels, according to The Asia Business Daily.

A broader consumer protection reckoning

The unclaimed benefits campaign sits within a wider industry-level reckoning with consumer trust. In May 2026, the CEOs of all 22 domestic life insurers gathered at an event organised by the Korea Life Insurance Association, signing a joint resolution pledging to shift all decision-making to “consumer standards,” not to delay insurance payments, and to ensure no one is excluded from insurance coverage, according to Seoul Economic Daily.

FSC director General Kim Jin-hong said at the event: “This is a meaningful occasion in which the financial industry, for the first time, voluntarily committed to promises with consumers. This commitment will lead to substantial change and serve as an exemplary case for enhancing trust across the entire financial industry.” FSS Deputy Governor Suh Young-il added: “If we go beyond short-term performance and build an ecosystem that coexists with consumers from a long-term perspective, the industry will achieve sustainable qualitative growth.”

On the supervisory side, the FSS has moved to give chief consumer officers veto rights over insurance product approvals and introduced mandatory pre-notification requirements before insurers can change claims review criteria. An FSS representative cited by The Asia Business Daily said the authority would “strengthen the feedback system to ensure that the committee’s advisory opinions are reflected in supervisory, inspection, and institutional improvement work” and would continue to “identify structural and habitual factors that undermine consumer trust and reinforce a proactive consumer protection framework.”

Regional context

The same structural problem is driving regulatory action in India. The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India’s (IRDAI) June 2026 consultation paper on a proposed Policyholders’ Education and Protection Fund (PEPF) cites unclaimed maturity payouts, death claims, and surrender values exceeding Rs9,305 crore held by Indian insurers at the start of fiscal year 2025, Insurance Business Asia reported. Among the fund’s proposed uses is dedicated infrastructure for recovering unclaimed benefits – a direct parallel to Korea’s KINFA model.

Whether the 2026 campaign moves Korea’s recovery rate beyond its long-standing 30% level will be a practical test of whether government address data sharing and multi-channel outreach can close a gap that nine years of campaigns have so far left largely intact.

Related Stories

Keep up with the latest news and events

Join our mailing list, it’s free!