Does Life Insurance Go Through Probate? A Long Island Family’s Guide

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When a loved one passes away on Long Island, life insurance is often the money the family is counting on first, for the mortgage, the funeral, or simply to keep the household running. The good news is that, in most cases, life insurance does not go through probate. But there are important exceptions every Nassau and Suffolk County family should understand.

The General Rule: Insurance Skips Probate

A life insurance policy is a contract. When the insured person dies, the company pays the named beneficiary directly. Because the money passes by contract rather than through the will, it does not go through the Surrogate’s Court at all. A surviving spouse or child named on the policy can typically file a claim and receive the proceeds without waiting for the probate process to finish, which is exactly why families rely on it for immediate needs.

The Big Exception: When the Estate Is the Beneficiary

Life insurance only avoids probate if there is a living, valid beneficiary to receive it. The proceeds can get pulled into probate when:

  • The policy names the “estate” as the beneficiary, either on purpose or by default.
  • The named beneficiary has died first and no contingent beneficiary was listed.
  • The beneficiary form was left blank or never updated.

In any of these situations, the money flows to the estate and is then distributed under the will, or under New York intestacy (EPTL Article 4) if there is no will. This is one of the most common, and most avoidable, reasons life insurance ends up in the Surrogate’s Court.

Beneficiaries Who Can’t Receive Directly

Naming a minor child as a direct beneficiary can also create a court headache, because an insurer generally will not hand a large sum to a child. That often requires a court-appointed guardian of the property. Long Island parents frequently address this by naming a trust as beneficiary instead, so the funds are managed for the child under the trust’s terms.

Does Avoiding Probate Mean Avoiding Tax?

No, and this trips up many families. Even though life insurance usually skips probate, the death benefit is generally included in the taxable estate for New York estate tax purposes if the deceased owned the policy. For a Long Island estate near New York’s 2026 exclusion of $7,350,000, a sizable policy can be the very thing that pushes it over the line, and New York’s tax “cliff” means crossing that threshold can be costly. Some families use an irrevocable life insurance trust to keep the proceeds out of the taxable estate, but that must be set up during life.

What to Do as a Beneficiary

If you are named on a policy, you generally contact the insurer, provide a certified death certificate and a claim form, and choose how you want the funds paid. You do not need letters from the Surrogate’s Court to collect a policy that names you directly.

Talk to a New York Attorney

Whether a policy avoids probate, and whether it affects New York estate tax, depends on exactly how the beneficiary designation reads. If a policy names the estate, a minor, or no one at all, or if the estate is near the tax threshold, consult a qualified New York estate attorney before filing anything in Nassau or Suffolk County.

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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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