Skip to main content

How are beneficiaries important to clients?

Start investing
Andrew Goldman

Andrew Goldman has been writing for over 20 years and investing for the past 10 years. He currently writes about personal finance and investing for Wealthsimple. Andrew's past work has been published in The New York Times Magazine, Bloomberg Businessweek, New York Magazine and Wired. Television appearances include NBC's Today show as well as Fox News. Andrew holds a Bachelor of Arts (English) from the University of Texas. He and his wife Robin live in Westport, Connecticut with their two boys and a Bedlington terrier. In his spare time, he hosts “The Originals" podcast.

Beneficiary is the legal term used to describe where you want your money or property to go when you die (though lots of living people share their wealth with beneficiaries through trusts.) Wills, RSPs, and life insurance policies allow you to name beneficiaries, which is an incredibly important thing to do. If you do, your money and property will seamlessly go directly to your heir or a favoured cause, with a minimum taken off the top in the process.

If you don’t name a beneficiary, your estate will end up in what’s called probate — the legal process of deciding who gets your stuff. Not only might your money and property end up where you didn’t intend, it’s expensive. In addition to hefty court fees, your estate will likely have to hire an attorney and, if you left property, an appraiser (who will hopefully discover a lost Rembrandt underneath that rec room dogs-playing-poker painting.) Life is unpredictable, so even if you’re young, you shouldn’t wait; one of the first things on any newlywed’s to-do list is to add a beneficiary to all your existing retirement accounts.

Last Updated March 6, 2018

Grow your retirement savings

Start saving
Spinning Wealthsimple coin

The simple way to save for retirement