I often sit down with new clients, and they’ll hand me a list: the house, the brokerage account, the 401(k). “Is that everything?” I’ll ask. The answer is almost always no. The most significant oversights in estate planning don’t come from complex tax strategies—they come from an incomplete picture of what a person truly owns. A prudent plan isn’t just about the big-ticket items; it’s a deliberate accounting of a lifetime’s worth of assets, obligations, and intentions.
Stewardship begins with inventory. Without a full accounting of what you have, you cannot direct its future. This framework helps you think more broadly about the components of your legacy.
The Foundational Assets—With Complications
Most people start with the obvious categories. These are the assets that typically have a deed, a title, or a monthly statement. But even here, the details matter immensely.
Real Estate: Whether it’s a co-op in Manhattan or a family home, the way you hold title is critical. Is it held as “joint tenants with right of survivorship,” meaning it passes directly to the co-owner? Or as “tenants in common,” where your share passes through your estate? These two phrases completely change the path the property takes upon your death. One avoids probate; the other invites it. We’ve seen families forced into costly and painful partition actions because the titling didn’t match the intent of the will.
Financial & Retirement Accounts: Bank accounts, brokerage funds, IRAs, and 401(k)s often have “Payable on Death” (POD) or “Transfer on Death” (TOD) beneficiary designations. These are powerful. A beneficiary designation on a retirement account will almost always override what your will says. I’ve had to explain to beneficiaries of a will that the multi-million dollar IRA they were expecting was left to an ex-spouse because the form was never updated after a divorce. An annual review of these forms is one of the most prudent actions you can take.
Life Insurance: Like retirement accounts, a life insurance policy is a contract that passes outside of probate. The proceeds go directly to the named beneficiary. This can be an effective tool for providing liquidity to your loved ones. However, if the beneficiary is a minor, the funds may end up under the control of a court-appointed guardian—someone you didn’t choose. A more prudent approach is often to name a trust as the beneficiary, which provides a fiduciary—a trustee you selected—to manage the funds for the child’s benefit.
The Assets That Cause the Most Fights
It’s rarely the house or the investment portfolio that tears families apart. More often, it’s the personal, intangible, or illiquid assets that were never properly addressed. These require a more intentional approach.
Tangible Personal Property: This category includes everything from art and jewelry to furniture and family photographs. These items may not have the highest monetary value, but their sentimental value is often immeasurable. A will can state that your personal property should be divided “as my children agree,” but that’s an invitation for conflict. A more deliberate method is to create a separate, signed writing—often called a personal property memorandum—that clearly lists who should receive specific items. This removes ambiguity and lessens the burden on your executor.
Business Interests: If you own a share of a closely-held business, what happens to that interest when you die? Is there a buy-sell agreement in place that dictates the terms of a sale to your partners? If not, your family could inherit an illiquid asset they have no idea how to manage, and your partners could be stuck with new, inexperienced co-owners. A business succession plan is not separate from your estate plan; it is a core component.
Digital Assets: We all accumulate a vast digital footprint—email accounts, cloud storage with family photos, social media profiles, and even cryptocurrency. Who has the right to access these after you’re gone? New York law, specifically the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act found in EPTL Article 13-A, provides a legal framework for this. Through your will, you can give your fiduciary the authority to manage your digital life, ensuring your memories are preserved or your accounts are closed according to your wishes.
The Other Side of the Ledger
An estate is not just a collection of assets. It is a balance sheet, and it includes liabilities. Your executor’s first legal duty, under the supervision of the Surrogate’s Court, is to pay your legitimate debts. This includes mortgages, credit card balances, personal loans, and final income taxes.
Only after all creditors are satisfied can distributions be made to beneficiaries. A prudent plan accounts for these debts and ensures there is enough liquidity in the estate to settle them without being forced to sell important assets like the family home or a business interest. This is a crucial part of protecting the legacy you intend to leave for the next generation.
Thinking through these categories—the obvious, the overlooked, and the owed—is the first step toward a deliberate and effective estate plan. It transforms a simple list of possessions into a meaningful instrument of your legacy.
The first step is often the simplest: create a full inventory of what you own and what you owe. When you’re ready to discuss how these pieces fit together into a deliberate plan, our firm can schedule a preliminary asset review to map out your generational legacy.




