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Policy Management

How to Choose a Life Insurance Beneficiary

By Ali Taqi

Your life insurance beneficiary is the person (or people) who receive the death benefit when you pass away. It sounds simple, but choosing the right beneficiary — and keeping it updated — is one of the most important decisions you'll make with your policy. Get it wrong, and your money might not go where you intended.

Primary vs. Contingent Beneficiaries

Your primary beneficiary is first in line to receive the death benefit. Your contingent (or secondary) beneficiary receives the payout only if the primary beneficiary can't — for example, if they've passed away before you. Always name both. If you only have a primary and they predecease you, the benefit could end up in your estate, subject to probate and potential delays.

Who Can Be a Beneficiary?

Almost anyone or anything can be named as a beneficiary. The most common choices are a spouse or domestic partner, adult children, a trust (especially useful for minor children), a business partner (for key person or buy-sell agreements), or a charitable organization. You can also split the benefit among multiple beneficiaries — for example, 50% to your spouse and 25% each to two children.

Naming Minor Children: Be Careful

In Florida, minors can't directly receive life insurance proceeds. If you name a child under 18 as your beneficiary, the court will appoint a guardian to manage the funds — and it might not be who you'd choose. The better approach is to set up a trust and name the trust as your beneficiary. This lets you control how and when the money is distributed to your children.

Common Beneficiary Mistakes

The most common mistake is simply forgetting to update your beneficiary after major life changes. Divorce is the big one — if your ex-spouse is still listed as your beneficiary, they'll receive the payout regardless of your current wishes. In Florida, divorce does automatically revoke a former spouse as beneficiary under state law, but it's still best practice to formally update your designation.

Other mistakes include naming your estate as beneficiary (which subjects the payout to probate and creditors), not naming a contingent beneficiary, and assuming your will overrides your beneficiary designation (it doesn't — the beneficiary designation on your policy always takes priority).

When to Review Your Beneficiaries

Review your beneficiary designations at least once a year and after any major life event: marriage, divorce, birth of a child, death of a beneficiary, or significant changes in your financial situation. It takes just a few minutes and can prevent serious problems down the road.

Your beneficiary designation is the final say on where your life insurance money goes. Make sure it reflects your current wishes — not the ones you had five years ago.

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