Why Beneficiary Designations Matter More Than Your Will in Farm Estate Planning

Beneficiary designations often control more assets than your will or trust. Life insurance, retirement accounts, bank accounts, and transfer-on-death deeds pass by beneficiary designation—and they override your will and trust if they are not properly coordinated. For Minnesota farm families, misaligned beneficiary designations are one of the most common ways otherwise solid estate plans fail.

Many Minnesota farmers believe their will or trust controls how their assets pass at death. In reality, beneficiary designations frequently control the outcome, regardless of what your estate planning documents say.

In our experience working with farm families, beneficiary designations are one of the most overlooked, and most powerful, parts of an estate plan.

You May Have Already Started Your Estate Plan Without Realizing It

If you have ever:

  • Purchased life insurance
  • Opened a retirement account
  • Added a payable-on-death (POD) or transfer-on-death (TOD) designation to a bank account

You already made an estate planning decision.

A beneficiary designation answers one of the most important estate planning questions: “Who gets this asset when I die?”

The problem is that many people never revisit those decisions or coordinate them with their broader farm succession plan.

Beneficiary Designations Always Control

This is the most important rule to understand: Beneficiary designations override your will and your trust. Always.

For example:

  • Your trust may say everything goes to your spouse, children, or church
  • But if your life insurance, retirement accounts, or bank accounts name someone else
  • Those assets will pass exactly as the beneficiary designation directs

No matter what your will or trust says.

We routinely see situations where:

  • An ex-spouse remains listed as a beneficiary
  • One child is named “temporarily” and never changed
  • Old designations conflict with updated estate plans

These mistakes often produce outcomes families never intended.

Why This Creates Problems in Farm Succession Planning

Farm estate plans often rely on balancing different assets:

  • Farmland
  • Retirement accounts
  • Life insurance
  • Operating cash

If beneficiary designations are not coordinated, that balance collapses.

A common example:

  • Parents intend for the farming child to receive the farm first
  • Non-farming heirs are meant to receive retirement accounts or life insurance
  • But retirement accounts pass directly to named beneficiaries instead of into the trust

The result is an uneven and unworkable outcome that places unnecessary pressure on the farming operation.

Transfer-on-Death Deeds: A Powerful Tool That Can Create Big Problems

Transfer-on-death deeds function like a beneficiary designation for real estate. Used correctly, they can be effective. Used incorrectly, they can create serious complications.

We often see TOD deeds that:

  • List all children equally without regard to who is farming
  • Immediately vest ownership in multiple people upon death
  • Provide no structure for management, leasing, or sale

This can result in:

  • Too many decision-makers
  • Loss of control
  • Conflict among heirs
  • Difficulty operating or transferring the farm

In many cases, a properly structured farm trust provides far better control, flexibility, and privacy.

The Risk of Naming One Child “Just to Help”

Another common issue arises when a parent names one child as a beneficiary with the expectation that they will “divide it up” later.

This is risky.

Once an asset passes to a named beneficiary:

  • It becomes that person’s personal property – was that the intent?
  • It may be exposed to creditors, liens, or judgments
  • If that person dies shortly after, the asset becomes part of their estate

If the intent was for someone to manage or distribute assets for others, that role should be handled through a trust with clear fiduciary authority—not through beneficiary designations.

Why Regular Reviews Matter

Beneficiary designations are often created:

  • At banks
  • Through employers
  • With insurance companies

They live outside your estate planning documents and are easy to forget.

That’s why we recommend reviewing beneficiary designations regularly—especially during three-to-five-year estate plan reviews or whenever new accounts are opened.

Farm estate planning is not a one-time event. Farms change, families change, and plans must evolve with them.

Why Coordination Matters

Effective farm estate planning requires aligning:

  • Trust provisions
  • Asset ownership
  • Beneficiary designations

This coordination is where many plans succeed—or fail.

At Wagner Oehler, Ltd., our attorneys regularly help Minnesota farm families identify and correct beneficiary designation issues before they create unintended consequences.

Take the Next Step

To learn more about estate planning, keep an eye on our Events page located at: https://www.wagnerlegalmn.com/events/

If you’re ready to start being proactive about your estate plan and want guidance tailored to your family, assets, and goals, contact Wagner Oehler, Ltd. to get started.

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Categories: Estate Planning, Farm