When a Manhattan widow passes away leaving a meticulously drafted last will and testament, her children often assume that document controls everything she owned. They gather the bank statements, the deed to the cooperative apartment, the IRA records, and the life insurance policy, expecting the executor to divide it all exactly as the will dictates. Weeks later, they discover the IRA went entirely to the eldest son, the joint checking account belongs solely to the daughter who paid the bills, and the will controls only a fraction of her actual wealth. The culprit is a misunderstanding of non-probate assets.
The Parallel Tracks of Wealth Transfer
I often tell clients that estate planning operates on two parallel tracks. One track leads straight to Surrogate’s Court, where a judge validates your will and oversees the distribution of your probate estate. This process takes months, requires formal legal filings, and becomes a matter of public record.
The other track is an express lane that bypasses the courthouse entirely. Assets on this second track transfer automatically by operation of law or by contract the moment you die. These are non-probate assets. They do not care what your will says, nor are they subject to the delays of the probate process. You could draft a will leaving your entire estate to a charity, but if your life insurance policy names your brother as the primary beneficiary, your brother receives the check.
Common Types of Non-Probate Assets
In our practice at Morgan Legal Group, P.C., we see families caught off guard by these automatic transfers time and again. To build a deliberate legacy, you must know exactly which of your assets fall into this category. The most common non-probate assets include:
- Jointly Owned Property: If you own a bank account, a brokerage account, or real estate as joint tenants with right of survivorship, the surviving owner absorbs your share instantly upon your death.
- Beneficiary-Designated Accounts: This includes retirement accounts like IRAs and 401(k)s, as well as payable-on-death (POD) bank accounts or transfer-on-death (TOD) brokerage accounts. The financial institution pays the funds directly to the person named on the beneficiary form on file.
- Life Insurance Proceeds: The death benefit is a contractual payout to the designated beneficiaries, entirely separate from your probate estate.
- Trust Assets: Property held in a revocable living trust or an irrevocable trust is technically owned by the trust itself, not you individually. A successor trustee distributes or manages these assets according to the trust agreement, completely outside the probate process.
The Dangers of Informal Non-Probate Planning
Many individuals intentionally try to convert all their wealth into non-probate assets to avoid Surrogate’s Court. They add their adult children as joint owners on their checking accounts and deed their homes to their children while retaining a life estate. This approach is often a severe mistake.
When you add a son or daughter to your bank account as a joint tenant, you instantly expose your life savings to their personal liabilities. If your child gets divorced, files for bankruptcy, or causes a catastrophic car accident, those funds are legally considered their asset just as much as yours. A creditor can seize the account, leaving you with nothing.
Naming a minor child as a direct beneficiary on a life insurance policy or retirement account creates an administrative nightmare. Minors cannot legally own property in New York. If a non-probate asset pays out to a twelve-year-old, the court must step in. A judge will appoint a property guardian—a restrictive process governed by SCPA Article 17—to hold the funds until the child turns eighteen, at which point the teenager receives the entire sum outright. Very few parents actually want an eighteen-year-old receiving a massive, unrestricted influx of cash.
When Beneficiary Designations Conflict With Your Will
The separation between probate and non-probate assets creates a dangerous blind spot. You can easily disinherit a child or leave a spouse with far less than intended simply by forgetting to update a beneficiary designation after a major life event.
We frequently review estate plans where a client’s will divides their estate equally among three children, but their largest asset—a $1.5 million IRA—still lists only the oldest child as the beneficiary. Because the IRA is a non-probate asset, that beneficiary designation overrides the will. The oldest child takes the entire account, and the remaining siblings are left to divide whatever happens to remain in the probate estate.
There are, however, strict statutory limits on how non-probate assets can exclude certain family members. Under New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §5-1.1-A, you cannot entirely disinherit a surviving spouse simply by moving all your wealth into non-probate vehicles. The statute treats joint accounts, payable-on-death accounts, and certain trusts as “testamentary substitutes.” Their value is pulled back into the calculation to ensure the surviving spouse receives their elective share—typically one-third of the net estate.
Aligning Your Entire Estate
Proper stewardship requires aligning both your probate and non-probate assets. A will is only a partial custodian of your legacy. If you do not coordinate the title and beneficiary designations of every account, policy, and piece of real estate you own, your estate plan is fundamentally broken.
This means conducting a thorough inventory of how every asset is held. We sit down with clients and look at the actual signature cards on their checking accounts. We pull the recorded deeds for their real property. We request the current, active beneficiary forms from their life insurance carriers and plan administrators.
Stewardship.
You cannot build a generational legacy by assuming a beneficiary form from 1998 still aligns with a will drafted in 2024. Every asset must be deliberately directed.
If you are unsure whether your beneficiary designations align with your last will and testament, do not leave it to chance. I recommend scheduling a 30-minute beneficiary and account titling audit with our firm to review your documents and ensure your wealth transfers exactly as you intend.





