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How to Name a Minor as Life Insurance Beneficiary
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How to Name a Minor as Life Insurance Beneficiary

5 min readBy TermHaven Team
Last updated:Published:

Naming a minor as your life insurance beneficiary creates legal complications. Learn the right way to provide for children using custodial accounts, trusts, and proper designations.

How to Name a Minor as Life Insurance Beneficiary

Naming your children as beneficiaries of your life insurance policy seems like a straightforward decision. After all, the entire reason most parents buy life insurance is to protect their children financially. But directly naming a minor as a beneficiary creates legal complications that can delay payment, increase costs, and ultimately reduce the amount your child receives.

Understanding the proper way to provide for minor children through life insurance is essential for every parent.

Why You Should Not Name a Minor Directly

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Insurance companies cannot legally pay a death benefit to a minor child. Minors, anyone under 18 in most states, lack the legal capacity to enter into contracts, manage significant sums of money, or sign a receipt for benefit proceeds.

When a minor is the named beneficiary, the insurance company will hold the funds until a legal guardian is appointed by a court to manage the money on the child's behalf. This process, called a guardianship or conservatorship proceeding, involves:

  • Court filings and attorney fees that can cost thousands of dollars
  • Court approval for expenditures, meaning the guardian must petition the court every time they want to use the funds for the child's benefit
  • Annual accounting requirements where the guardian must file detailed reports with the court
  • Processing delays of weeks to months while the court processes the petition

The result is that the money your child needs immediately for living expenses, school, and stability is locked in bureaucratic proceedings while your family grieves.

Option 1: Name a Custodian Under UTMA/UGMA

The Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) or Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA) allows you to name an adult custodian who manages the funds until the child reaches a specified age, typically 18 or 21 depending on your state.

When structuring your beneficiary designation, you would write something like: "Jane Doe, as custodian for [Child's Name] under the [State] Uniform Transfers to Minors Act."

Advantages:

  • Avoids court-appointed guardianship
  • Insurance company can release funds to the custodian immediately
  • Custodian has flexibility to use funds for the child's benefit
  • Simple to set up and does not require an attorney

Limitations:

  • The child receives full control of the money at the UTMA termination age (18 or 21)
  • You cannot restrict how the money is used after the child reaches the termination age
  • Not ideal for very large death benefits or families with complex needs

Option 2: Establish a Trust

A trust is the most flexible and protective way to provide life insurance proceeds to minor children. You create a trust document that specifies exactly how the money should be managed and distributed.

Revocable living trust. You name the trust as your life insurance beneficiary. The trustee you designate manages the funds according to the trust terms. You can specify that funds be used for education, healthcare, and living expenses, with the remaining balance distributed when the child reaches an age you choose, perhaps 25 or 30 rather than 18.

Testamentary trust. Created through your will, this type of trust comes into existence upon your death. The disadvantage is that it must go through probate, which can delay the creation of the trust.

Irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT). The trust owns the life insurance policy, keeping the death benefit out of your taxable estate. This is primarily useful for high-net-worth families concerned about estate tax.

Advantages of trusts:

  • Complete control over how and when funds are distributed
  • Can stagger distributions at various ages
  • Professional trustee management available
  • Protects funds from the child's creditors, divorce settlements, or poor financial decisions
  • Can cover multiple children with specific provisions for each

Limitations:

  • Requires an attorney to draft, typically costing $1,500 to $5,000
  • Trust must be maintained and updated as circumstances change
  • Professional trustee fees apply if you use a bank or trust company

Option 3: Name Your Spouse as Primary Beneficiary

The simplest approach for many families is naming your spouse or partner as the primary beneficiary and trusting them to use the funds for the children's benefit.

However, this approach has vulnerabilities:

  • If both parents die simultaneously, the children still need a proper beneficiary structure
  • A surviving spouse might remarry, and the new marriage could divert funds
  • Financial mismanagement or creditor claims could deplete the funds
  • There is no legal mechanism ensuring the money is used for the children

If you choose this route, name the children as contingent beneficiaries through one of the methods above.

Setting Up Your Beneficiary Designation Correctly

Be specific. Vague designations like "my children" create disputes about who qualifies. Name each child by full legal name.

Include contingencies. Always name primary and contingent beneficiaries. If your primary beneficiary predeceases you, the contingent beneficiary receives the benefit.

Use per stirpes vs. per capita correctly. A per stirpes designation means that if a beneficiary predeceases you, their share passes to their descendants. A per capita designation splits the benefit equally among surviving beneficiaries only.

Review after life changes. Birth of a new child, adoption, divorce, or remarriage all require updating your beneficiary designations.

What to Do Right Now

  1. Pull your current policy and check who is named as beneficiary.
  2. If a minor is named directly, contact your insurance company to update the designation.
  3. Consult an estate planning attorney if your estate is large or your family situation is complex.
  4. Coordinate with your will. Ensure your will names a guardian for your minor children and your life insurance beneficiary structure is consistent.
  5. If you do not have life insurance yet, get a quote and set up proper beneficiary designations from the start.

Your children are the reason you buy life insurance. Make sure the legal structure ensures they actually receive the protection you intend. Visit our resources page for more estate planning guidance, or explore life insurance for families.

Affiliate Disclosure

This article may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you.
#beneficiary designation
#minors
#estate planning
#trusts
#children

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