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Many people believe their will is the final word on who receives their assets.
In reality, some of the most valuable assets pass outside of your will entirely – and those designations can override what your will says.
If those pieces aren’t aligned, your plan may not work the way you expect, and your family could be left dealing with confusion, imbalance, or even conflict.
The good news: with proper coordination, these issues are entirely preventable.
Beneficiary designations are instructions you make directly on certain accounts, naming who receives the asset when you pass away.
These designations take priority over your will.
In practice, that means:
Assets go directly to the named person
No court involvement is required for that transfer
Your will does not control those assets – even if it says something different
Common examples include:
These assets move automatically to the listed beneficiary – regardless of what your will says.
Life changes – but forms often don’t.
We regularly see accounts still naming:
An ex-spouse
A deceased individual
Someone the client no longer intends to benefit
What it causes: assets passing to the wrong person, with little to no ability to correct it after death.
A will may say “divide everything equally,” but one account names only one child as beneficiary.
That account passes entirely to that one person – outside the will.
What it causes: unintended imbalance and family tension.
A family creates a trust to manage assets, protect beneficiaries, or avoid probate.
But their accounts still name individuals instead of the trust.
Those assets bypass the trust completely.
What it causes: the plan is only partially effective, and important protections may be lost.
Naming a minor or someone who needs support as a direct beneficiary can create complications.
A court may need to step in to manage the funds, or the individual may receive assets without structure or protection.
What it causes: delays, court involvement, and loss of control over how assets are used.
Beneficiary designations are often completed once – when an account is opened – and then forgotten.
Over time, your overall estate plan may change, but those designations remain the same.
Because they operate separately from your will, they can unintentionally override even a well-drafted plan.
At Liberty Legacy Law Group, we don’t look at estate planning as a set of separate documents – we look at how everything works together.
Our process typically includes:
A will is an important foundation – but it doesn’t control everything.
If beneficiary designations aren’t aligned, they can quietly undo your intentions.
Families may be left asking:
A well-coordinated plan answers those questions in advance.
And when everything is aligned, your family doesn’t have to sort through conflicting instructions – they can simply follow a clear path forward during a difficult time.
At Liberty Legacy Law Group, we’re not just planning for the future we’re honoring the lives, stories, and values that matter most.
call for a consultation 443-888-5850
At Liberty Legacy Law Group, we’re not just planning for the future—we’re
honoring the lives, stories, and values that matter most.