05/11/2026
Most families have a will. Most families also have retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and bank accounts with beneficiary designations.
What most families do not realize is that those two things operate completely independently. The will controls what goes through your estate. The beneficiary designation controls everything else.
And if they contradict each other, the beneficiary form wins.
An IRA with an ex-spouse still listed as beneficiary goes to the ex-spouse, regardless of what the will says. A life insurance policy with a deceased parent still named goes through a messy legal process to sort out. A brokerage account with a transfer-on-death designation skips the trust entirely.
This week's post covers how beneficiary designations actually work, why they override wills, and what a properly coordinated estate plan looks like when both pieces are aligned.
If you have accounts with beneficiary designations and have not reviewed them alongside your will or trust recently, this post is worth reading.
Full breakdown:
Beneficiary designations overrides your will, no matter what it says. Outdated forms cause problems, here is how to fix it.