Be careful when naming beneficiaries
You might not have thought much about bene-ficiary designations - but they can play a big role in your estate planning. When you purchase insurance policies and open investment accounts, such as your IRA, you'll be asked to name a benefi-ciary, and, in some cases, more than one. This might seem easy, especially if you have a spouse and children, but if you experience a major life event, such as a divorce or a death in the family, you may need to make some changes - because beneficiary designations carry a lot of weight under the law.
In fact, these designations can supersede the instructions you may have written in your will or living trust, so everyone in your family should know who is expected to get which assets. One significant benefit of having proper beneficiary designations in place is that they may enable beneficiaries to avoid the time-consuming - and possibly expensive - probate process.
The beneficiary issue can become complex because not everyone reacts the same way to events such as divorce - some people want their ex-spouses to still receive assets while others don't. Furthermore, not all the states have the same rules about how beneficiary designations are treated after a divorce. And some financial assets are treated differently than others.
Here's the big picture: If you've named your spouse as a beneficiary of an IRA, bank or brokerage account, insurance policy, will or trust, this beneficiary designation will automatically be revoked upon divorce in about half the states. So, if you still want your exspouse to get these assets, you will need to name them as a non-spouse beneficiary after the divorce. But if you've named your spouse as beneficiary for a 401 (k) plan or pension, the designation will remain intact until and unless you change it, regardless of where you live.
However, in community property states, couples are generally required to split equally all assets they acquired during their marriage. When couples divorce, the community property laws require they split their assets 50/50, but only those assets they obtained while they lived in that state. If you were to stay in the same community property state throughout your marriage and divorce, the ownership issue is generally straightforward, but if you were to move to or from one of these states, it might change the joint ownership picture. Thus far, we've only talked about beneficiary designation issues surrounding divorce. But if an ex-spouse - or any bene-ficiary - passes away, the assets will generally pass to a contingent beneficiary - which is why it's important that you name one at the same time you designate the primary beneficiary. Also, it may be appropriate to name a special needs trust as beneficiary for a family member who has special needs or becomes disabled. If this individual were to be the direct beneficiary, any assets passing directly into their hands could affect their eligibility for certain programs.
You may need to work with a legal professional to sort out beneficiary designation issues and the rules that apply in your state. But you may also want to do a beneficiary review with your financial advisor whenever you experience a major life event, such as a marriage, divorce or the addition of a new child. Your investments, retirement accounts and life insurance proceeds are valuable assets - and you want them to go where you intended. This article was written by



False offers of cash subsidies used to ‘capture’ health insurance customers, lawsuit alleges
Budget 2024: Federal government details Canada's first national flood insurance program to be launched in partnership with property and casualty insurers
Advisor News
- SEC in ‘active and detailed’ settlement talks with accused scammer Tai Lopez
- Sketching out the golden years: new book tries to make retirement planning fun
- Most women say they are their household’s CFO, Allianz Life survey finds
- MassMutual reports strong 2025 results
- The silent retirement savings killer: Bridging the Medicare gap
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Annexus and Americo Announce Strategic Partnership with Launch of Americo Benchmark Flex Fixed Indexed Annuity Suite
- Rethinking whether annuities are too late for older retirees
- Advising clients wanting to retire early: how annuities can bridge the gap
- F&G joins Voya’s annuity platform
- Regulators ponder how to tamp down annuity illustrations as high as 27%
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Wellpoint taps Rachel Chinetti as president
- Proposed changes to MA and Part D would harm seniors’ coverage in 2027
- Pan-American Life Insurance Group Reports Record 2025 Results; Premiums Reached $1.86 Billion and Net Income Totaled $110 Million as Company Enters Its 115th Year
- LightSpun and Smile America Partners Announce Partnership to Accelerate Dental Provider Enrollment to Expand Treatment for 500K Underserved Kids
- Lawmakers try again to change ‘reflection in the mirror’ for cancer patients
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Annexus and Americo Announce Strategic Partnership with Launch of Americo Benchmark Flex Fixed Indexed Annuity Suite
- LIMRA: Individual life insurance new premium sets 2025 sales record
- How AI can drive and bridge the insurance skills gap
- Symetra Partners With Empathy to Offer Bereavement Support to Group Life Insurance Beneficiaries
- National Life Group Ranked Second by The Wall Street Journal in Best Whole Life Insurance Companies of 2026
More Life Insurance News