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Can someone with power of attorney change beneficiaries on insurance or retirement accounts before death? – South Carolina

Short Answer

Usually, no—not unless the power of attorney document clearly gives that authority and the account contract or provider will accept an agent’s change. In South Carolina, beneficiary designations on life insurance, annuities, and many retirement accounts are contract-based, and the “owner” typically controls changes during life. If an agent changes beneficiaries without clear authority or for the agent’s own benefit, the change can be challenged and may create personal liability.

Understanding the Problem

In South Carolina probate and estate administration, a common question is whether an attorney-in-fact (the person acting under a power of attorney) can change who receives a life insurance payout or a retirement account at death. The decision point is whether the power of attorney grants authority to change beneficiary designations for non-probate assets before the owner’s death, and whether the financial company will treat the agent’s change as valid.

Apply the Law

In South Carolina, many assets pass outside probate by contract—such as life insurance, annuities, payable-on-death (POD) accounts, transfer-on-death (TOD) registrations, and most retirement accounts with beneficiary forms. The owner’s beneficiary designation generally controls at death, and it often overrides what a will says. A power of attorney can allow an agent to handle financial transactions during the owner’s lifetime, but beneficiary changes are treated as a major act that often requires clear, specific authority and strict compliance with the company’s procedures.

Key Requirements

  • Clear authority in the power of attorney: The document should expressly authorize beneficiary changes (and sometimes gifts or estate-planning changes). Many institutions will refuse a beneficiary change if the power of attorney is silent or too general.
  • Compliance with the contract and provider rules: Insurance companies and plan administrators usually require their own forms and may require proof of authority, notarization, or additional documentation.
  • Fiduciary duty and conflict-of-interest limits: An attorney-in-fact must act for the principal’s benefit. A beneficiary change that benefits the agent (or the agent’s family) can trigger disputes, claims of undue influence, or breach of fiduciary duty.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: The question assumes a living account owner who has signed a power of attorney and wants (or someone wants) the attorney-in-fact to change beneficiaries before death. Under South Carolina practice, the key issues are whether the power of attorney clearly authorizes beneficiary changes, whether the insurance company or plan administrator will accept an agent’s change, and whether the change would violate the agent’s fiduciary duties—especially if the agent becomes the new beneficiary.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: The attorney-in-fact (agent) acting for the owner (principal). Where: With the insurance company, annuity issuer, brokerage firm, bank, or retirement plan administrator (not the Probate Court). What: The provider’s beneficiary change form plus a copy of the power of attorney and any required proof of authority. When: During the owner’s lifetime; a beneficiary change generally must be received and accepted before death to avoid disputes.
  2. Provider review: The institution may review whether the power of attorney authorizes the specific act. Some providers require their own internal power-of-attorney certification process or reject changes that look like self-dealing.
  3. After death: If a change is disputed, the personal representative may need to gather the account paperwork, confirm the last beneficiary on file, and consider whether a court action is needed to set aside an improper change or recover funds.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Irrevocable beneficiary designations: Some contracts allow an owner to make a beneficiary irrevocable. If the designation is irrevocable, neither the owner nor an agent can change it without meeting the contract’s requirements.
  • “Will says otherwise” problem: Non-probate beneficiary designations often control even if a will leaves everything to someone else. That is why confirming the actual beneficiary on file with the provider is a critical step in South Carolina estate administration.
  • Self-dealing risk: If an attorney-in-fact changes a beneficiary designation to benefit the agent, it can trigger claims for breach of fiduciary duty and litigation over whether the change reflected the owner’s intent.
  • Missing or outdated paperwork: Mergers, rollovers, and account changes can cause beneficiary forms to be lost or replaced. Retirement plan rollovers and insurance company changes are common points where beneficiary designations unexpectedly change or cannot be located.
  • Institution refusal: Even with a valid power of attorney, a provider may refuse an agent’s beneficiary change without very specific language or additional documentation, forcing a different planning approach while the owner still has capacity.

Conclusion

In South Carolina, an attorney-in-fact can only change beneficiaries on insurance, annuity, and many retirement or TOD/POD-type accounts if the power of attorney clearly grants that authority and the provider’s rules allow an agent to make the change during the owner’s lifetime. Because beneficiary designations are contract-driven and often control outside probate, improper or last-minute changes can lead to disputes and liability. Next step: confirm the current beneficiary on file and submit the provider’s change form with the power of attorney documentation before death.

Talk to a Probate Attorney

If a power of attorney is being used to change beneficiaries on life insurance, annuities, or retirement accounts, a South Carolina probate attorney can help review the power of attorney language, spot conflict-of-interest issues, and explain the steps needed to reduce the risk of a later challenge.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about South Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed South Carolina attorney.

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