I once worked with a family from Brooklyn where the father’s will was perfectly clear: his entire estate was to be divided equally between his son and daughter. The will was signed, witnessed, and stored securely. But when he passed, his son was shocked to learn his sister was receiving nearly 90% of their father’s wealth. The reason? A life insurance policy worth over a million dollars, which named only the daughter as the beneficiary. The will said one thing; the beneficiary form said another. In that conflict, the beneficiary form won.
This is a devastatingly common surprise in estate administration. Many people spend time and resources creating a will, believing it to be the final word on their legacy. They assume it governs every asset they own. It does not. A prudent estate plan requires understanding which assets answer to a will—and which do not.
Assets That Answer to Your Will
Your Last Will and Testament directs the distribution of assets owned in your individual name at the time of death. These assets, which have no pre-assigned beneficiary or joint owner with rights of survivorship, form what we call your “probate estate.”
These typically include:
- Real estate titled solely in your name (like a Manhattan condominium).
- Bank or brokerage accounts held in your name alone.
- Personal property, such as art, jewelry, and vehicles.
- An interest in a business owned as a sole proprietor.
After your death, your will is submitted to the New York Surrogate’s Court in the county where you resided. An executor, nominated in the will, is appointed by the court. This executor has a fiduciary duty to gather the probate assets, pay final debts and taxes, and then distribute the remaining property according to the will’s instructions. This process is public and court-supervised. The will is the playbook, but only for these specific assets.
Assets That Bypass Your Will Entirely
Many of your most valuable assets exist outside the reach of your will. These “non-probate assets” pass directly to a chosen individual by operation of law, governed by a contract you signed with a financial institution.
The most common examples include:
- Life Insurance Policies: The death benefit is paid directly to the beneficiary named in the policy.
- Retirement Accounts: Funds in a 401(k), IRA, 403(b), or other pension plan are transferred to the designated beneficiary.
- Bank Accounts: Accounts designated as “Payable on Death” (POD) or “In Trust For” (ITF) go to the named person.
- Jointly Owned Property: Real estate or bank accounts owned as “Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship” (JTWROS) automatically pass to the surviving joint owner.
In these situations, the beneficiary designation form is the controlling document. When you die, the beneficiary simply presents a death certificate and identification to the institution to claim the asset. No probate, no court, no executor—and no reference to your will.
When a Will and a Beneficiary Form Collide
The conflict in the Brooklyn family’s case arose from a simple legal hierarchy: a specific contractual designation almost always overrides a general instruction in a will. New York law is clear on this point. Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 13-3.2 explicitly states that the rights of beneficiaries of retirement plans and insurance contracts are not defeated by the terms of a will.
The law presumes your most recent, specific instruction is the one you intended. A will written in 2010 might leave everything to a spouse. But if you update your IRA beneficiary in 2020 to name your child after your spouse has passed, that 2020 designation controls the IRA. The will’s instruction is irrelevant for that specific account.
This system works well when managed with intention. It allows for the swift transfer of assets without the delay and expense of Surrogate’s Court. When neglected, it becomes a trap. People get divorced and forget to remove an ex-spouse from a life insurance policy. They have a falling out with a child but don’t update their 401(k) beneficiary form. The result is a legacy that betrays their final wishes.
The Danger of Naming Your Estate
Some people, attempting to make their will control everything, name “My Estate” as the beneficiary of their life insurance or IRA. This is almost always a mistake. While it forces the asset to be governed by the will, it also drags it into the probate process, defeating the primary benefit of a beneficiary designation. It exposes the asset to creditors and can create significant tax disadvantages, especially for retirement accounts. It is a costly and unnecessary detour.
Intentional stewardship means ensuring every document works in concert. Your will and your beneficiary designations are not separate instruments but two parts of a single, coherent plan for your family’s future.
An Immediate Step You Can Take
The work of aligning your estate plan begins with a simple audit. I suggest you locate the beneficiary designation forms for every one of your non-probate accounts—every retirement plan, life insurance policy, and annuity. Create a list of the primary and contingent beneficiaries named on each. Then, place that list next to your will and ask one question: “Does this reflect my current wishes?” If the answer is no, or if you find blank beneficiary lines, you have identified a critical flaw in your plan. Our firm can then help you systematically correct these forms to ensure your legacy is distributed exactly as you intend.



