Pearson Butler office

6 Important Estate Planning Considerations - Part 4: Beneficiary Designations

word bubble This is part of a series of 6 blogs on important estate planning considerations. I’ll intersperse these blogs with other timely blogs.

The first article in the series showed how an estate plan prepares one for incapacity during life and not just for the distribution of assets at death. The second article in the series focused on how an estate plan should take into consideration the potential for future Long-Term Care (“LTC”) needs. The third article focused on the differing needs of the beneficiaries and the need for different planning as a result. This fourth article focuses on beneficiary designations and the need for coordinating them with the overall plan.

Beneficiary designations are a powerful tool in estate planning. They are a simple way to direct that specific assets go where desired. However, they must be used with care and coordinated with the overall estate plan to meet the client’s objectives.

Life insurance and retirement accounts, such as IRAs, have beneficiary designations that determine to whom the assets go at death. Bank, brokerage, and other financial accounts may also have such beneficiary designations. Additionally, in many states, real estate may also have a transfer on death designation which works like a beneficiary designation to transfer the asset at the death of the current owner.

In other words, these accounts go automatically to the designated individuals, regardless of what the Will or Trust provides. In other words, it’s a very blunt instrument. This is often confusing to clients.

Let’s look at an example that illustrates one common problem with beneficiary designations. Mary has a Will prepared by an excellent attorney. Mary’s Will provides for everything to go to her two children, John and Sally. Mary has $2 million in assets. She believes $1 million will go to each of her children, as her Will provides. Her children just turned 18.

Mary’s assets include a brokerage account which she opened 25 years ago before she had children. That account designates her sister, Peg, as the beneficiary. Mary also has a home that has a transfer on death designation to her mother.

Mary dies in an accident. Her brokerage account goes to her sister, Peg, due to the beneficiary designation. Mary’s home goes to her mother due to the transfer on death designation. In other words, Mary’s children are left with no mother, no home, and no money. Maybe Mary’s mother and sister would give the assets to Mary’s children, or maybe they wouldn’t. They’d be under no legal obligation to do so.

Another common problem with beneficiary designations (and other specific designations) is that the assets could change in value. Let’s say, in the example above, John had been the beneficiary of the brokerage account and Sally had been the transfer on death beneficiary of the home. Mary’s intent would have been realized had the assets been comparable in value at her death. However, assets fluctuate in value. Let’s say Mary had invested in the next Amazon or Apple and the brokerage account increased from $1 million to $10 million. Meanwhile, her home increased in value only a little to $1.2 million. Thus, at Mary’s death in this scenario, John would receive the $10 million brokerage account and Sally would receive the $1.2 million house. Mary certainly never intended John to receive more than nine times the inheritance Sally would receive. This unintendedly lopsided bequest would sow the seeds of bitterness in the relationship between John and Sally.

The beneficiary designations avoided probate, but they introduced other problems. A better way would have been to have Mary’s assets owned by her revocable trust without beneficiary designations. This would have avoided probate and provided incapacity planning, which the beneficiary designations did not. Further, the trust could have left the assets proportionately to the two children, rather than subject their future inheritances to the roulette wheel of chance. Finally, the trust could have added layers of protection for John and Sally to provide divorce protection, asset protection, or estate tax protection.

Beneficiary designations can be a simple solution in the right situation. However, often a revocable trust can provide a solution that is better at achieving the client’s goals.

Stephen C. Hartnett, J.D., LL.M.
Director of Education
American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys, Inc.
9444 Balboa Avenue, Suite 300
San Diego, California 92123
Phone: (800) 265-2314
www.aaepa.com

Categories