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Customer loyalty? Those reward points may die with you

FILE - In this Dec. 14, 2007 file photo, a traveler uses a Delta SkyMiles credit card to buy an airline e-ticket at the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, C...
In this Dec. 14, 2007 file photo, a traveler uses a Delta SkyMiles card to buy an airline e-ticket at the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, Calif. Many customer loyalty rewards programs cannot be transferred if the cardholder dies.Damian Dovarganes / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Loyalty club members often worry that a program will end up six feet under, leaving them with nothing to show for participating. But if you die, those reward points and miles amassed may be just as worthless.

Delta SkyMiles, Southwest Rapid Rewards and Hilton HHonors are among the loyalty programs that do not allow points to be transferred after death, according to a new study from Colloquy, a market research firm. 

"The issue is handled on a case-by-case basis, but HHonors will let members submit a death certificate for a one-time, fee-free transfer," said Dasha Ross, director of portfolio communications at Hilton Worldwide.

Other programs, including American Express Membership Rewards, Citibank's ThankYou Rewards and Best Western Rewards, don't have policies detailed online—which the research firm reports can lead to conflicting interpretations from customer service representatives.

"I don't think there's any sort of gamesmanship going on," said study author Jeff Berry. "Companies just have not thought through what happens when membership ends" because someone dies, said Berry, also Colloquy's research director.

The question of what happens to rewards upon death is becoming a bigger issue as Americans join more programs and their balances get bigger—potentially leaving more on the table, when reward holders die. In 2011, outstanding loyalty points had a collective value of $50 billion by Colloquy's estimates.

Take the case of Randy Petersen. If he passed away tomorrow, he'd leave behind more than 20 million miles. Petersen, founder of Frequent Flyer Services, a publisher of frequent flyer analysis, holds millionaire status in five hotel programs and four airlines. That's why he has a mileage estate plan.

"It'll all go to my lovely bride," Petersen said. "I've already given her all my passwords and everything else."

But Petersen is in the minority. According to Colloquy, 76 percent of respondents in an April survey of 1,252 adults haven't considered who would inherit their reward balances.

"This is something we're encouraging clients to ask questions about," said certified financial planner Tim Maurer. He's also vice president at The Financial Consulate in Hunt Valley, Md. Account numbers, passwords and balances for valuable loyalty memberships should be included in an addendum to a will, in the same way that people already list individual pieces of property, he said.

Bequeathing point balances in your will won't supersede program terms of service, though. "What you have to understand from an inheritance aspect is that you are largely bound by the contract you agreed to," said Evan Carroll, co-author of "Your Digital Afterlife." "Not much can be done unless you're operating inside those particular regulations."

The Marriott Rewards program, for example, only allows transfer of points to a spouse or domestic partner. Some programs allow heirs to redeem points, but not transfer them, Berry said.

Programs can also have complicated inheritance policies—requiring estate executors to pay transfer fees or send in death certificates within a set time after the account holder dies.

"We're advocating an explicit policy," said Berry. "It's obviously an awkward time for someone, at the point at which they're cleaning up someone's estate. They shouldn't have to make a number of calls to figure this out."

Consumers with big balances may want to explore the issue of bequeathing rewards while they're still alive, said Carroll. That can entail redeeming rewards for others to use, or transferring them to a family member or friend.

One key catch: While you're alive, most programs charge a transfer fee for each point or mile, plus a service fee, which can add up to hundreds of dollars for shifting a large balance. If you die, company policies often waive such transfer fees.