Insurance Beneficiary — Name One and the Payout Skips the Estate
TimeWill Editorial · Updated 2026-06-19
An insurance beneficiary doesn't go through probate — the insurer pays the proceeds directly to the beneficiary under the contract. If a beneficiary is named, the payout generally isn't part of the estate and isn't governed by the will; if no beneficiary is named, or the beneficiary died before the insured, the proceeds are treated as part of the estate and distributed by statutory succession. So name a beneficiary on every policy, and keep it updated.
Insurance does something no other estate tool can: the payout skips probate. When you die, the insurer transfers the money straight to the beneficiary's account — no notarization, no court, no waiting for estate registration. The beneficiary on a policy can be entirely different from the heirs in your will.
When to Update Your Beneficiary
At divorce, you must update the beneficiary on any policy tied to your spouse — otherwise your ex-husband or ex-wife still gets the payout. Marriage, a new child, a job change with new coverage — every major life change is a reason to review all your policies.
How Your Family Finds Out You Had Insurance
This is the biggest problem. If your family doesn't know about a policy, that policy might as well never have been bought. Gather every policy number, insurer, and customer service number, and store them encrypted in TimeWill. After something happens, it goes out to your family automatically — they need the policy number when they file a claim.
FAQ
Q: What if the insurance beneficiary and the will's heirs conflict?
They don't. The insurance beneficiary gets the payout, the will's heirs split the estate — they run on separate tracks. Insurance proceeds aren't part of the estate. If you name your spouse as beneficiary and leave your property to your children in the will, both take effect at the same time and independently.
Q: Can digital assets be insured?
There's currently no insurance product, at home or abroad, dedicated to digital estates. Personal property insurance can add a data-recovery rider (covering hard-drive damage), but it doesn't cover the inheritance of digital assets. The closest equivalent is a password vault with a heartbeat trigger — more direct than insurance.
Q: Can I name a friend as my insurance beneficiary?
Yes. Insurers don't restrict who the beneficiary can be in relation to you — spouse, child, friend, colleague, anyone. If there's someone you want to provide for who isn't a statutory heir, insurance is the best way to bypass the estate distribution.
References & Notes
- Insurance Law of the People's Republic of China, Articles 39–42 (Designation and Change of Beneficiaries; Payment of Insurance Proceeds)