You spend years building retirement savings and life insurance coverage to protect the people you love. But if your beneficiary designations are wrong or outdated, your carefully built financial plan might not work the way you intended.
Beneficiary designations determine who receives your retirement accounts, life insurance, and other assets when you die, and they override your will. Getting them right is essential, yet mistakes are surprisingly common and costly.
Why Beneficiary Designations Matter
When you die, certain assets pass directly to named beneficiaries without going through probate.
- Retirement accounts (401(k), IRA, 403(b))
- Life insurance policies
- Annuities
- Payable-on-death bank accounts
- Transfer-on-death brokerage accounts
These beneficiary designations supersede your will. Even if your will says everything goes to your spouse, if your ex spouse is still named on your 401(k), they get it. Even if you intended to split assets equally among children, if only one child is named on your life insurance, only that child receives it.
This isn't theory. Courts consistently uphold beneficiary designations over wills, even when the designation clearly doesn't reflect current intentions.
Common Beneficiary Mistakes
Mistake 1: Never Updating After Major Life Changes
Life changes. Beneficiaries should change with it.
Marriage. If you married and never updated beneficiaries, assets might still go to parents or siblings rather than your spouse.
Divorce. If you divorced and never removed your ex spouse, they likely still receive your retirement accounts and life insurance, even if your will says otherwise.
Birth or adoption. New children need to be added. Otherwise, one child might inherit everything while siblings receive nothing.
Death of a beneficiary. If your named beneficiary dies and you don't update, assets might go to your estate and through probate rather than to your second choice.
Remarriage. Blended families require careful beneficiary planning to ensure both your spouse and children from previous marriages are provided for.
Mistake 2: Naming Minor Children Directly
You can't leave substantial assets directly to minors. If a 10 year old is named as beneficiary on a $500,000 life insurance policy, the court will appoint a guardian to manage the money until the child reaches adulthood at age 18 or 21, depending on state.
This creates problems.
- Court involvement and legal fees
- Guardian must file annual accountings with the court
- When the child reaches legal adulthood, they receive the full amount with no restrictions, potentially making poor financial decisions with a large windfall
Better approach is to name a trust as beneficiary, with specific instructions about when and how money is distributed. Your children can receive funds for education and health needs while protecting the bulk until they're older and more financially mature.
Mistake 3: Not Naming Contingent Beneficiaries
Your primary beneficiary might die before you. Without a contingent or backup beneficiary, assets typically flow to your estate, triggering probate and potentially delaying distribution for months.
Always name at least one contingent beneficiary. If your spouse is primary, consider naming your children or a trust as contingent beneficiaries.
Mistake 4: Improper Trust Designations
If you name a trust as beneficiary, use the exact legal name of the trust and make sure the trust exists and is properly funded. "The Smith Family Trust" isn't specific enough. You need "The John and Jane Smith Revocable Living Trust dated March 15, 2020."
Also ensure the trust has provisions for handling inherited retirement accounts. Not all trusts do, which can create tax problems and forced distributions.
Mistake 5: Equal Percentages Without Considering Tax Implications
Leaving 50% to each of two children sounds fair, but if one receives a taxable traditional IRA and the other receives tax free Roth IRA or life insurance proceeds, they're not actually receiving equal amounts after taxes.
Consider the after tax value when dividing assets among beneficiaries.
Mistake 6: Forgetting About All Accounts
People often update their will but forget about beneficiary designations on these accounts.
- Old 401(k)s from previous employers
- Small IRAs opened years ago
- Life insurance policies through work
- Annuities purchased long ago
- Bank accounts with payable-on-death designations
Create a master list of all accounts with beneficiary designations and review them together.
Mistake 7: Naming Your Estate as Beneficiary
Retirement accounts and life insurance should almost never name your estate as beneficiary. This triggers probate, exposes assets to creditors, and can create unfavorable tax treatment for retirement accounts.
If you want assets distributed according to your will, name a trust as beneficiary instead.
Mistake 8: Not Coordinating With Your Overall Estate Plan
Your beneficiary designations should work together with your will, trust, and overall estate planning goals. They shouldn't contradict each other or create unintended consequences.
For example, if your will provides for your disabled child through a special needs trust, but you name that child directly as beneficiary on retirement accounts, you've just disqualified them from needs based government benefits.
Special Considerations for Women
After Divorce
This is critical. In most states, divorce does not automatically remove your ex spouse as beneficiary. You must actively change the designation.
We've seen divorced women die with their ex spouse still named on life insurance meant to support their children. The ex spouse received the proceeds, and the children received nothing.
Update beneficiaries immediately after divorce finalization. Don't wait.
After Widowhood
As a surviving spouse, you might need to update beneficiaries on accounts you inherited. Also update your own accounts to reflect new circumstances, perhaps naming adult children or a trust rather than your deceased spouse.
Career Interruptions
If you took time away from paid work, you might have old retirement accounts from previous employers that you haven't thought about in years. Track these down and verify beneficiaries are current.
Longer Life Expectancy
Women typically outlive their spouses. This means you're more likely to be managing your own beneficiary designations alone in later years. Review them regularly to ensure they still reflect your wishes as circumstances change.
How to Review and Update Beneficiaries
Step 1: Create a Complete Inventory
List every account with beneficiary designations.
- Current employer retirement plans
- Former employer retirement plans
- Individual IRAs (traditional and Roth)
- Life insurance policies (personal and through work)
- Annuities
- Bank accounts with POD/TOD designations
- Brokerage accounts with TOD designations
For each, note the current primary and contingent beneficiaries.
Step 2: Review for Accuracy
Ask yourself these questions.
- Do these beneficiaries reflect my current wishes?
- Have there been any major life changes since I last updated?
- Are minor children named directly (a problem)?
- Are there contingent beneficiaries?
- Do designations coordinate with my will and trust?
- Are trust names correct and specific?
Step 3: Make Updates
Contact each institution to update beneficiaries. Most allow online updates, though some require paper forms. Keep confirmation of updates in your files.
Don't rely on verbal promises from customer service. Complete the official process and get written confirmation.
Step 4: Document Your Decisions
Keep a master list with these details.
- Account name and number
- Institution
- Primary beneficiaries (names and percentages)
- Contingent beneficiaries (names and percentages)
- Date last updated
Store this with your estate planning documents so your executor knows what accounts exist and who should receive them.
Step 5: Review Regularly
Review beneficiaries at these times.
- Annually as part of your year-end financial review
- After major life events (marriage, divorce, births, deaths)
- When you update your will or trust
- When you change jobs or roll over retirement accounts
Getting Professional Help
Complex situations benefit from professional guidance.
- Blended families
- Special needs children or dependents
- Large estates with potential estate tax issues
- Significant tax-deferred retirement accounts
- Business ownership interests
An estate planning attorney and financial advisor can help ensure beneficiary designations coordinate with your overall plan and minimize taxes while achieving your goals.
Taking Action This Week
Pull out your most recent statements for retirement accounts and life insurance. Check who's listed as beneficiary. If you can't remember the last time you updated them, or if there have been major life changes, update them this week.
This isn't a task you can postpone until you "get around to it." Your beneficiary designations might be the most important financial documents you have. Make sure they say what you intend.
This material is for educational purposes only. Estate planning involves complex legal and tax considerations. Please consult with qualified legal and tax professionals regarding your specific situation.
Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC. Investment advice offered through Great Valley Advisor Group, a registered investment advisor and separate entity from LPL Financial.
Chesapeake Financial Planners | 2402 Scotlon Ct, Forest Hill, MD 21050 | (410) 652-7868 | www.chesapeakefp.com