
Most estate plans do not fail because they were drafted incorrectly.
They fail because no one revisits them.
For many clients, estate planning is treated as a completed task. Documents are signed, placed in a binder, and assumed to work indefinitely. From that point forward, the plan becomes static while everything around it continues to change.
For advisors, this creates a structural problem.
The plan still exists. It just no longer reflects reality.
The “Set It and Forget It” Problem
Clients rarely view estate planning as an ongoing process.
Once documents are in place, attention shifts back to investments, income planning, and tax strategy.
Advisors, in turn, often assume the legal structure is being handled elsewhere.
Over time, this creates a gap. The estate plan is no longer integrated with:
- The client’s current balance sheet
- Their evolving family structure
- Changes in tax law and distribution rules
What began as a coordinated plan becomes a disconnected set of documents.
What Actually Breaks Over Time
The risk is not abstract. It shows up in specific, repeatable ways.
Beneficiary Designations Become Misaligned
Retirement accounts and insurance policies pass by contract.
If those designations are outdated, they override everything else.
Advisors will often see:
- Former spouses still listed
- Deceased individuals named as primary beneficiaries
- No contingent beneficiaries in place
These issues are common and often go unnoticed for years.
Assets Move Outside the Plan
Clients open new accounts, consolidate institutions, or acquire new assets.
If those assets are not titled correctly or coordinated with the estate plan, they sit outside the intended structure.
A revocable trust that is not properly funded becomes largely ineffective, regardless of how well it was drafted.
The Tax Landscape Changes
Estate planning is not static from a tax perspective.
Changes in estate tax thresholds, income tax treatment, and retirement account distribution rules can materially affect how a plan functions.
A strategy that was efficient ten years ago may now produce unintended results.
Trust Structures Lose Their Purpose
Trusts are often created to solve a specific problem at a specific time.
Over a decade, the client’s financial position, goals, and risk profile can shift significantly.
What once made sense may no longer align with the client’s current objectives.
Fiduciaries Become the Weak Point
Executors, trustees, and agents are selected based on current relationships and circumstances.
Ten years later, that same individual may be:
- Unavailable
- Incapable
- No longer the best choice
The plan may still function on paper, but execution becomes more difficult in practice.
A Scenario Advisors Will Recognize
A client passes away with an $8 million estate.
The estate plan is in place. The documents appear complete.
However:
- A significant retirement account still names a former spouse as beneficiary
- A revocable trust was created but never fully funded
- The named executor is no longer able to serve
- The plan predates major changes to retirement account distribution rules
From a distance, the plan looks sufficient.
In administration, it creates delay, inefficiency, and avoidable tax exposure.
These are not unusual outcomes. They are the predictable result of a plan that was never updated.
Why This Falls on the Advisor’s Radar
Advisors are often the only professionals who maintain consistent, long-term contact with the client.
That positioning matters.
While attorneys draft documents at a point in time, advisors see:
- Ongoing changes in asset structure
- Shifts in net worth
- Life events as they happen
Without incorporating estate planning into periodic reviews, these changes remain unaddressed.
A Practical Way to Reintroduce the Conversation
Estate planning reviews do not need to be complex to be effective.
A simple framework can surface most issues:
- Has your family changed?
- Has your net worth changed?
- Has the law changed?
If the answer to any of these is yes, the plan likely needs to be revisited.
This approach keeps the conversation grounded in facts the client already understands.
Turning Observation Into Action
An outdated estate plan is not neutral. It introduces risk through misalignment, and that risk tends to be invisible until something triggers it.
Advisors are often the first to see the conditions that signal a plan needs attention. A beneficiary designation that predates a divorce. A trust that was never funded. An executor who is no longer the right person for the role. These are not legal questions at the point of recognition. They are planning observations that belong in the same conversation as portfolio reviews and income strategy.
When estate planning is treated as part of an ongoing client relationship rather than a completed task, these issues surface early. That is where the value is created, and that is where the advisor’s positioning matters most.
If you are working with clients whose estate plans have not been reviewed in recent years, Heircraft Planning is available to assist. We work with advisors and their clients to evaluate how existing plans align with current assets, family dynamics, and applicable law. We welcome the opportunity to be a resource in that conversation. You are also welcome to attend one of our free educational seminars in Mobile to learn more about how we work with advisors and their clients. Visit heircraftplanning.com/upcoming-events to see upcoming dates.
