14 Va. Admin. Code § 5-200-65
A. Each insurer offering long-term care insurance shall, as a protection against unintentional lapse, comply with the following:
1. Notice before lapse or termination. No individual long-term care policy or certificate shall be issued until the insurer has received from the applicant either a written designation of at least one person, in addition to the applicant, who is to receive notice of lapse or termination of the policy or certificate for nonpayment of premium, or a written waiver dated and signed by the applicant electing not to designate additional persons to receive notice. The applicant has the right to designate at least one person who is to receive the notice of termination, in addition to the insured. Designation shall not constitute acceptance of any liability on the third party for services provided to the insured. The form used for the written designation must provide space clearly designated for listing at least one person. The designation shall include each person's full name and home address. In the case of an applicant who elects not to designate an additional person, the waiver shall state: "Protection against unintended lapse. I understand that I have the right to designate at least one person other than myself to receive notice of lapse or termination of this long-term care insurance policy for nonpayment of premium. I understand that notice will not be given until 30 days after a premium is due and unpaid. I elect NOT to designate a person to receive this notice."
The insurer shall notify the insured in writing of the right to change this written designation, no less often than once every two years.
3. Lapse or termination for nonpayment of premium. No individual long-term care policy or certificate shall lapse or be terminated for nonpayment of premium unless the insurer, at least 30 days before the effective date of the lapse or termination, has given notice to the insured and to those persons designated pursuant to subdivision 1 of this subsection, at the address provided by the insured for purposes of receiving notice of lapse or termination. No notice shall be effective unless it has been mailed in accordance with one of the following:
c. The notice is sent by first-class United States mail, and the insurer obtains at the time of mailing a written receipt from the United States Postal Service showing the date of mailing, the number of items mailed, and the name and address of the insured and those persons designated pursuant to subdivision 1 of this subsection to whom the notice was mailed.
Notification shall also be provided to the agent of record of the insured, if any, within 72 hours after the notice has been mailed to the insured and those persons designated pursuant to subdivision 1 of this subsection.
There is a presumption that notice is delivered five days after the date of mailing, as evidenced in the written receipt obtained by the insurer pursuant to subdivision 3 a, b, or c of this subsection. The insurer shall retain any and all evidence of mailing the notice, including the list of recipients, as applicable, and a copy of the notice, for at least three years following the date of notice. Notice may not be given until 30 days after a premium is due and unpaid.
§§ 12.1-13 and 38.2-223 of the Code of Virginia.
Derived from Virginia Register Volume 17, Issue 4, eff. December 1, 2000; amended, Virginia Register Volume 30, Issue 22, eff. January 1, 2015.