The mistakes families discover too late

Last look on husband

The Beneficiary Blueprint Series, Part 3

By Echo McNeill, Associate Financial Planner

There are few conversations harder than the ones that happen after a loved one passes — not just the emotional ones, but the practical ones. “What did they want?” “Where do their accounts go?” “Who do we call?”

Echo McNeill
Associate Financial Planner

Those questions get even more difficult when beneficiary designations are out of date, unclear or incomplete. I saw this early in my career working for national wirehouse and broker-dealer firms, where even experienced investors occasionally believed their estate plan “covered everything.” It’s an understandable assumption — but it isn’t how the system works.

Beneficiary forms are powerful. They determine who inherits certain accounts, regardless of what a will or trust may say. When they’re accurate, they ensure clarity and peace. When they’re not, they can create avoidable pain in a moment already full of grief.

Today, I want to highlight a few of the most common — and preventable — mistakes I’ve seen over the years.

Mistake #1: No Contingent Beneficiary Listed

A primary beneficiary is the first person (or entity) who receives the account.

A contingent beneficiary steps in only if something happens to the primary.

But many accounts never have a contingent beneficiary listed at all. Without one, assets may pass through probate instead of directly to the people you’d have chosen. Probate is public, time-consuming and emotionally draining.

Adding a contingent takes just a few minutes, and it can spare your family months of difficulty.

Mistake #2: Outdated Names, Relationships or Contact Information

Life changes. Relationships evolve. Families grow.

Beneficiary forms? They do not update themselves.

Some of the situations I’ve encountered include:

  • Ex-spouses still listed from decades-old paperwork
  • A first-born child listed, but their younger siblings missing
  • A parent listed as beneficiary long after the individual became a parent themselves

These errors rarely reflect someone’s true wishes. They reflect how easy it is to assume our paperwork is “already handled.”

Mistake #3: Assuming Your Will Overrides Everything

This is one of the most common misconceptions I encounter.

A will does not supersede beneficiary designations.

Your beneficiary form — the one typically completed during account opening — is the legally controlling document.
This means:

  • An IRA could legally go to the wrong person even if your will says otherwise.
  • Life insurance benefits may bypass the people you intended to support.
  • A trust may be structured perfectly and still not apply to certain accounts.

It’s not that anyone meant for it to happen. It’s that no one matched the documents to the plan.

The Good News

Every one of these mistakes can be prevented with a brief review — and we make that review simple. For many people, the process takes less than 15 minutes.

Why It Matters at Elevage Partners

Your legacy is too meaningful to leave to chance.

At Elevage Partners, our role is to help ensure your financial life — including your legacy — reflects your values, your relationships and your intentions. Reviewing beneficiary designations isn’t just paperwork. It’s an act of care.

If you’d like hands-on support, schedule a beneficiary review with me by clicking here.

Important Disclosure(s)
The information contained herein represents the views of Elevage Partners at a specific point in time and is based on information believed to be reliable. No representation or warranty is made concerning the accuracy of any data compiled herein In addition, there can be no guarantee that any projection, forecast, or opinion in these materials will be realized. Any statement non-factual in nature constitutes only current opinion which is subject to change. These materials are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute investment advice. Any reference to a security listed herein does not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold such security. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. The historical returns of any securities and/or sectors mentioned in this commentary are not necessarily indicative of their future performance.