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Home / Money / Estate Planning / 5 Beneficiary Designation Mistakes That Can Wreck Your Estate Plan

5 Beneficiary Designation Mistakes That Can Wreck Your Estate Plan

Updated: April 14, 2026 By Robert Farrington | < 1 Min Read Leave a Comment

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Life Insurance Beneficiary

Key Points

  • Beneficiary designations on retirement accounts, life insurance, and bank accounts are legally binding contracts that override your will and an outdated form can send your assets to the wrong person.
  • Only 24% of Americans have a will, and even those who do often neglect to align their beneficiary designations with the rest of their estate plan.
  • Simple errors can trigger probate, unnecessary taxes, and family disputes.

You spent thousands on an estate plan. You signed the will. You funded the trust. And none of it may matter because a beneficiary form you filled out 15 years ago when you started a new job could override everything.

Beneficiary designations on retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and payable-on-death bank accounts are legally binding contracts. They operate entirely outside your will and trust. When these forms are outdated, incomplete, or misaligned with the rest of your plan, the result can be assets going to an ex-spouse, a child being accidentally disinherited, or a six-figure tax bill no one saw coming.

According to Caring.com’s 2025 estate planning survey, only 24% of American adults have a will — down from 33% in 2022. But even among the minority who do plan, beneficiary designation errors remain one of the most common and costly oversights. Here are five mistakes you need to avoid.

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1. Failing To Update Your Beneficiaries 

This is the most frequent (and often the most damaging) beneficiary mistake. You get married, divorced, have a child, or lose a spouse, and the beneficiary forms on your 401(k), IRA, and life insurance policies stay exactly the same.

The legal consequences are real. In the 2001 Supreme Court case Egelhoff v. Egelhoff, the court ruled that a former spouse was entitled to a deceased person’s life insurance proceeds because the beneficiary form was never updated after the divorce even though state law would have revoked the designation. Federal law (ERISA) governed the employer plan and the form won.

The fix is straightforward: review every beneficiary designation after any marriage, divorce, birth, death, or major financial change. Keep a master list of all accounts that carry beneficiary designations and update it annually.

2. Assuming Your Will Overrides Beneficiary Designations

This misconception trips up families constantly. A will only governs assets that pass through your estate, meaning assets that don’t already have a named beneficiary or surviving joint owner. Retirement accounts, life insurance policies, annuities, and payable-on-death bank accounts all bypass the will entirely.

So if your will says “everything goes to my three children equally,” but your $500,000 IRA still names your ex-spouse, your ex gets the IRA. Your children get nothing from that account, and there’s very little legal recourse.

Americans hold more than $9 trillion in employer-sponsored retirement plans and IRAs. For many families, these accounts represent the largest single asset in the estate. Treating the beneficiary form as an afterthought is a significant financial risk.

3. Skipping Contingent Beneficiaries

Many people name a primary beneficiary and leave the contingent (backup) line blank. This creates a serious problem: if your primary beneficiary dies before you do (or at the same time in a common accident) the account defaults to your estate. That means it goes through probate, which is the exact outcome most estate plans are designed to avoid.

Probate adds time, legal fees, and public disclosure. For retirement accounts, it can also accelerate tax consequences. When an IRA passes through an estate rather than directly to a named beneficiary, the distribution rules become less favorable, potentially forcing faster withdrawals and a larger tax hit.

Always name at least one contingent beneficiary on every account. If your situation is complex (blended families, minor children, or a special needs dependent) consider naming a trust as the contingent beneficiary, but only with guidance from an estate planning attorney.

4. Naming Your Estate As The Beneficiary

Some account holders deliberately name “my estate” as the beneficiary, thinking it simplifies things. It does the opposite. Naming your estate as the beneficiary of a retirement account or life insurance policy forces the asset through probate and strips away several tax-advantaged options for your heirs.

When a retirement account passes directly to a named individual, the beneficiary can often stretch distributions over a period of up to 10 years. When it passes to the estate, the account may need to be distributed within five years or even faster, depending on whether the original owner had started required minimum distributions. That compressed timeline can push heirs into higher tax brackets.

Life insurance proceeds are similar. Paid to a named beneficiary, they’re generally income-tax-free. Paid to the estate, they become part of the probate estate, subject to estate taxes and creditor claims.

5. Relying On Joint Accounts Instead Of Proper Designations

Some families try to sidestep estate planning altogether by adding a child or family member as a joint owner on bank accounts, investment accounts, or even real estate. The logic seems simple: when one owner dies, the other automatically inherits.

But joint ownership comes with serious risks that most families don’t consider. A joint account holder has full legal access to the funds during both owners’ lifetimes. That means the account is exposed to the other owner’s creditors, lawsuits, divorce proceedings, and financial mismanagement. If your adult child racks up debt or gets sued, those jointly held funds could be seized.

Joint accounts can also create unintended tax consequences and financial aid complications. As The College Investor has covered in detail, parent-child joint accounts carry hidden financial risks that range from Medicaid eligibility problems to FAFSA reporting issues.

A better approach: use payable-on-death (POD) or transfer-on-death (TOD) designations on bank and investment accounts. These keep the account in your name alone during your lifetime but transfer automatically to your named beneficiary at death — without probate and without the risks of joint ownership.

What This Means For Your Family's Finances

Beneficiary designation mistakes don’t just create legal headaches — they directly affect your family’s financial security. An outdated form can redirect hundreds of thousands of dollars away from the people you intended to protect. A missing contingent beneficiary can trigger probate costs that eat into your heirs’ inheritance. A joint account set up for convenience can expose your savings to someone else’s creditors.

The financial stakes are particularly high for families with retirement accounts as their primary asset. With the average 401(k) balance for Americans aged 55–64 exceeding $200,000, a single beneficiary error can redirect a meaningful portion of a family’s wealth.

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Editor: Colin Graves

Robert Farrington
Robert Farrington

Robert Farrington is the founder of The College Investor and is widely recognized as one of the nation’s leading voices on student loan debt and saving for college. He holds an MBA from UC San Diego Rady School of Management and has spent over 15 years researching, writing, and advising on student loans, 529 plans, financial aid programs, and saving and investing for young professionals.

Robert has been featured in the The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, NBC News, and Forbes, where he has been a regular personal finance contributor for over a decade. His work combines both professional expertise and personal experience – he successfully navigated his own student loan repayment journey and has helped thousands of readers do the same.

He is committed to making the intersection of personal finance and education transparent and accessible. You can learn more about Robert on the About Page or on his personal site RobertFarrington.com.

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