Beneficiary Designations and How They Override Your Will in Florida

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A beneficiary designation is a contract-based instruction that tells a bank, insurer, or retirement plan exactly who receives an asset when you die. In Florida, that designation almost always overrides your will, because the asset passes by operation of contract and never enters your probate estate. So if your life insurance names your ex-spouse while your will leaves everything to your children, the insurance company pays the ex-spouse, and your children get nothing from that policy.

That single fact surprises more families than any other in my probate practice. People spend money on a beautifully drafted will, then assume it governs everything they own. It does not. Understanding which assets ignore your will, and why, is one of the most important pieces of estate planning for any Florida homeowner.

What a Beneficiary Designation Actually Is

When you open a retirement account, buy life insurance, or set up an annuity, you sign a form naming the person who inherits that asset directly. The financial institution holds a contractual promise to pay whoever is named on file at the moment of your death. This is sometimes called a non-probate transfer or a will substitute.

Because the transfer happens by contract, the asset never becomes part of the estate your personal representative administers. Your will controls your probate estate. A beneficiary designation controls a beneficiary asset. They are two separate channels, and the contract channel wins for the asset it governs.

Common assets that pass by beneficiary designation in Florida include:

  • Life insurance policies
  • Annuities
  • 401(k), 403(b), IRA, and other retirement accounts
  • Payable-on-death (POD) bank accounts
  • Transfer-on-death (TOD) brokerage accounts
  • Some pension and employer benefit plans

POD and TOD Accounts Under Florida Law

Florida specifically authorizes payable-on-death designations on bank accounts and similar deposits. Under Florida Statutes Chapter 655, a POD account passes to the named beneficiary outside probate once the account holder dies. Brokerage and securities accounts use the transfer-on-death mechanism governed by the Florida Uniform Transfer-on-Death Security Registration Act, found in Chapter 711.

During your lifetime, a POD or TOD beneficiary has no rights at all. You can spend the money, change the beneficiary, or close the account without anyone’s permission. The designation only springs to life at death, and at that moment it controls the account regardless of what your will says.

Why the Designation Beats the Will

The reason is structural. A will only has power over property that would otherwise pass through the probate process described in the Florida Probate Code, Chapters 731 through 735. Assets that already have a named recipient never enter probate, so the will has nothing to act on.

Think of it this way. Your will is the instruction manual for the leftovers, meaning everything that does not already have a destination. If an asset has its own destination written on a contract, the will is irrelevant to it. Courts in Florida consistently enforce the contract, even when the result clearly contradicts what the person seemed to want in their will.

This is why I tell clients that the form they sign at the bank in five minutes can quietly undo the estate plan they spent weeks building. Coordination matters more than people expect, and a sound plan treats designations as a core component, not an afterthought. A Florida attorney handling your estate planning should review every beneficiary form you have signed, not just draft your will.

The Homestead and Real Estate Angle in South Florida

South Florida estate planning lives and dies by the homestead. Florida’s homestead protections come from Article X, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution, and they are unusually strong. Homestead real estate generally cannot be devised freely if you are survived by a spouse or minor child. Those constitutional limits can override the disposition in your will, much like a beneficiary designation overrides it on a financial account.

Real estate owners often try to skip probate on their home using a Lady Bird deed (an enhanced life estate deed) or, since 2024, a Florida transfer-on-death deed authorized by recent legislation. These instruments work like a beneficiary designation for real property: title passes automatically at death to the named remainderman, outside probate, and the will does not touch it.

The catch is the homestead. A TOD or Lady Bird deed cannot lawfully cut a surviving spouse or minor child out of constitutionally protected homestead rights. I have seen homeowners record a deed naming one adult child, fully believing the matter was settled, only for the surviving spouse’s homestead claim to reshape the entire outcome. If you own a Florida home, your deed strategy, your will, and your beneficiary forms all need to speak with one voice.

How These Tools Interact

  1. Title how you hold the home. Joint tenancy with right of survivorship and tenancy by the entireties pass to the co-owner automatically, ahead of any will.
  2. Deeds with death provisions. Lady Bird and TOD deeds transfer outside probate but yield to homestead law.
  3. Financial designations. POD, TOD, retirement, and insurance beneficiaries control those specific assets.
  4. The will. Governs whatever is left after the above have done their work.

Where Beneficiary Designations Go Wrong

The problems are rarely dramatic. They are quiet, paperwork-shaped mistakes that surface only after someone dies, when nothing can be fixed.

Stale designations after divorce. Florida Statute 732.703 automatically voids a designation in favor of a former spouse on many assets after a divorce, but the statute has important exceptions, including assets governed by federal ERISA law such as most employer 401(k) plans. Federal law can preempt the Florida statute, so the ex-spouse may still collect a workplace retirement account even after divorce. Never rely on the statute as a substitute for updating the form yourself.

Naming a minor directly. If you name a young child as the direct beneficiary of a large policy, no insurer will hand a check to a minor. A court-supervised guardianship of the property may be required, which is expensive and ends when the child turns eighteen with full access to the money. A trust named as beneficiary usually serves the child far better.

Naming your estate. Listing “my estate” as the beneficiary pulls the asset back into probate, surrendering the very advantage the designation offered, and for retirement accounts it can accelerate income taxes on the inherited funds.

Forgetting to name a contingent beneficiary. If your only named beneficiary dies before you and you never added a backup, the asset often defaults into your probate estate, where the will and intestacy rules take over in ways you never intended.

When You Want an Asset to Run Through a Trust

For clients with minor children, blended families, beneficiaries who receive public benefits, or simply a wish for controlled distributions, naming a trust as the beneficiary is frequently the right move. The designation points to the trust, and the trust’s own terms then govern how and when the money reaches the people you care about.

This matters enormously for special-needs and asset-protection planning. A direct payout can disqualify a disabled beneficiary from Medicaid and other benefits, whereas a properly structured trust can protect both the inheritance and the eligibility. Many families coordinate these designations with specialized vehicles such as a or, for those already receiving benefits, a . The rules differ by state, so the structure that works in New York is not identical to Florida planning, but the underlying principle is the same: the designation must point to the trust, or the protection never takes effect.

A Practical Audit You Can Do This Week

You do not need to be a lawyer to start. Pull together every account and policy you own and confirm three things on each one: the primary beneficiary, the contingent beneficiary, and whether either name is outdated. Pay special attention to anything opened before a marriage, divorce, birth, or death in the family. Then compare that list against what your will and any trust actually say.

If the two do not match, the designation wins, so the designation is where you fix it. For a deeper review of how your home, accounts, and documents fit together, our team is happy to walk through it with you on our contact page, and you can read more about the documents themselves on our wills overview.

Beneficiary designations are not a footnote to your estate plan. For most Florida families, they control the largest assets of all, and they do it without ever asking your will for permission. Treat them with the same care you give the documents you sign in a lawyer’s office, and your plan will actually do what you built it to do.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do beneficiary designations always override a will in Florida?

Yes, for the specific asset they govern. Life insurance, retirement accounts, annuities, and POD/TOD accounts pass by contract directly to the named beneficiary and never enter probate, so your will has no power over them. The will only controls assets that lack their own named recipient.

What happens to my ex-spouse's beneficiary designation after a Florida divorce?

Florida Statute 732.703 automatically voids many designations in favor of a former spouse after divorce. However, federal ERISA law preempts this statute for most employer-sponsored retirement plans like 401(k)s, so an ex-spouse may still collect those. Always update forms yourself rather than relying on the statute.

Can a transfer-on-death deed override homestead rights on my Florida home?

No. Florida’s constitutional homestead protections under Article X, Section 4 protect a surviving spouse and minor children. A TOD deed or Lady Bird deed transfers the home outside probate, but it cannot lawfully defeat those homestead rights when a protected spouse or minor child survives you.

Should I name my children directly or name a trust as beneficiary?

Naming a minor directly can trigger a court-supervised guardianship and gives full control at age eighteen. Naming a properly drafted trust lets you control timing, protect a beneficiary who receives public benefits, and shield the inheritance. A trust is often the safer choice for minor or vulnerable beneficiaries.

What is the risk of naming my estate as a beneficiary?

Listing your estate pulls the asset back into probate, eliminating the speed and privacy benefit of the designation. For retirement accounts, it can also accelerate income taxes on the inherited funds. Naming a specific person or trust, plus a contingent beneficiary, is almost always better.

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DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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