A client once came to my office, proud that he had just updated his will. He left everything to his two children from his current marriage. The problem? His largest single asset—a seven-figure life insurance policy—still named his ex-wife as the sole beneficiary on a form he signed 15 years and one divorce ago. His will was clear, but in the eyes of the law, it was also irrelevant for that policy. The insurance company was legally bound to pay the person named on their form, not the heirs named in his will.
This is a situation my firm sees far too often. People spend significant time and resources crafting a will, believing it to be the final word on their entire estate. But in New York, as in other states, many valuable assets are not governed by a will at all. These are called non-probate assets, and they pass outside the supervision of the Surrogate’s Court. Understanding how they work is fundamental to true legacy stewardship.
Assets That Bypass Your Will and Probate
Probate is the court-supervised process of validating a will, paying off debts, and distributing the assets under its control. A non-probate asset, however, has its own built-in set of instructions for transfer upon death, instructions that supersede whatever your will says. This transfer happens automatically, by operation of law or contract.
The most common categories of non-probate assets include:
- Assets Held in a Trust: Property titled in the name of a revocable or irrevocable trust is controlled by the trust agreement, not the will. This is a primary tool we use to avoid probate.
- Jointly Owned Property with Right of Survivorship: When a married couple in Brooklyn owns a brownstone as “joint tenants with right of survivorship,” the surviving spouse automatically becomes the sole owner upon the other’s death. The will has no say in the matter.
- Retirement Accounts: Your 401(k), IRA, 403(b), and other retirement plans are all transferred via beneficiary designation forms. The person you named on that form—not the person named in your will—gets the funds.
- Life Insurance Policies: Like retirement accounts, the proceeds of a life insurance policy are paid directly to the beneficiaries you designated with the insurance company.
- Payable-on-Death (POD) or Transfer-on-Death (TOD) Accounts: These are bank or brokerage accounts where you have formally named a beneficiary to inherit the account directly, avoiding probate.
While avoiding probate can be efficient, it also creates dangerous blind spots if these assets are not coordinated with your overall estate plan.
The Peril of “Set It and Forget It” Beneficiary Forms
The greatest risk with non-probate assets is that their designations become stale. Life happens—divorce, marriage, the birth of a child, the death of a parent. We update our wills to reflect these changes, but many forget to update the beneficiary forms for each individual account and policy.
This oversight can lead to devastating and irreversible outcomes. I have seen children from a second marriage unintentionally disinherited from a parent’s largest asset because a form was never updated. I have seen estates go to a long-estranged sibling instead of a devoted spouse.
New York law even tries to account for this. Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 5-1.4 automatically revokes any bequests made in a will to a former spouse upon divorce. It’s a statutory safeguard. However, the law’s protection is incomplete—it does not automatically revoke beneficiary designations on assets like life insurance or employer-sponsored retirement plans. The U.S. Supreme Court has affirmed that federal law (ERISA) governing these plans preempts state laws like New York’s, meaning the old beneficiary form almost always wins.
This is not just paperwork. It is the difference between a deliberate legacy and an accidental one.
Intentional Stewardship of Your Entire Estate
A well-crafted estate plan is more than just a will. It is a deliberate alignment of all your assets—probate and non-probate alike. The goal is to ensure they work in concert to achieve your objectives for your family.
For many of my clients, especially those with complex family structures or specific goals for their heirs, we use a revocable living trust as the central vehicle. By retitling assets into the trust or naming the trust as the beneficiary of non-probate assets, you create a single, unified set of instructions. This allows for far more sophisticated planning. A trust can hold assets for a minor child until they reach a mature age, protect a beneficiary’s inheritance from creditors or a future divorce, and provide for a loved one with special needs without jeopardizing their government benefits.
Simply naming an individual on a TOD form can’t accomplish any of that. It’s a blunt instrument. A trust allows for nuance, protection, and control—the hallmarks of prudent, generational planning.
Your legacy is the sum of all its parts. A will controls some, but beneficiary designations and property titles control the rest. Ensuring they all point in the same direction is the work we do with our clients every day.
The first step is to know what you have and where it is designated to go. I encourage you to gather the beneficiary forms for every life insurance policy and retirement account you own. If you are unsure whether they align with your current wishes, schedule a review with our office to audit these designations and integrate them properly into your estate plan.





