Skip to main content

What Beneficiaries Need to Know

What do you do when an account owner passes away?

If your loved ones have invested, saved or insured themselves to any degree, you may be named as a beneficiary to one or more of their accounts, policies or assets in the event of their deaths. While we all hope “that day” never comes, we do need to know what to do financially if and when it does.

Legally, just who is a “beneficiary”? IRAs, annuities, life insurance policies and qualified retirement plans such as 401(k)s and 403(b)s are set up so that the accounts, policies or assets are payable or transferable on the death of the owner to a beneficiary, usually an individual named on a contractual document that is filled out when the account or policy is first created.

In addition to the primary beneficiary, the account or policy owner is asked to name a contingent (secondary) beneficiary. The contingent beneficiary will receive the asset if the primary beneficiary is deceased.

Some retirement accounts and policies may have multiple beneficiaries. Charities, schools and nonprofits are also occasionally named as beneficiaries. If you have individually listed one (or more) of your kids or grandkids as designated beneficiaries of your 401(k) or IRA, that designation should override a charitable bequest you have stated in a trust or will.1

A will is NOT a beneficiary form. When it comes to 401(k)s and IRAs, beneficiary designations are commonly considered first and wills second. If you willed your IRA assets to your son in 2008 but named the man who is now your ex-husband as the beneficiary of your IRA back in 1996, those IRA assets are set up to transfer to your ex-husband in the event of your death. Sometimes beneficiary forms are revised; often they are never revised.1

If a retirement account owner passes away, what steps need to be taken? First, the beneficiary form must be found, either with the IRA or retirement plan custodian (the financial firm overseeing the account) or within the financial records of the person deceased. Beyond that, the financial institution holding the IRA or retirement plan assets should also ask you to supply:

·         A certified copy of the account owner's death certificate
·         A notarized affidavit of domicile (a document certifying his or her place of residence at the time of death)

If the named beneficiary is a minor, a birth certificate for that person will be requested. If the beneficiary is a trust, the custodian will want to see a W-9 form and a copy of the trust agreement.2,3,4

If you are named as the primary beneficiary, you usually have four options regardless of what kind of retirement savings account you have inherited:

1)    Open an inherited IRA and transfer or roll over the funds into it.
2)    Roll over or transfer the assets to your own, existing IRA (spouse only).
3)    Withdraw the assets as a lump sum (liquidate the account, get a check).
4)    Disclaim as much as 100% of the assets, thereby permitting some or all of them to be inherited by a contingent beneficiary

However, these options may be influenced or limited by four factors:

1)    The kind of retirement plan you have inherited.
2)    Whether the named beneficiary is a spouse, non-spouse, trust or estate.
3)    The age at which the account owner passed away.
4)    The resulting tax consequences.

Before you make ANY choice, you should welcome the input of a tax advisor.3,5

What if you are a spousal beneficiary? If that is the case, you may elect to:

·         Roll over or transfer assets from a traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SEP-IRA or SIMPLE IRA into your own traditional or Roth IRA, or an inherited traditional or Roth IRA
·         Withdraw the assets as a lump sum
·         Roll over or transfer qualified retirement plan assets from a 401(k), 403(b), etc. into your own retirement account, or take them as a lump sum
·         Disclaim up to 100% of the assets within 9 months of the original account owner’s death3,5,8
                           
What if you are a non-spousal beneficiary? If this is so, you may elect to:

·         Roll over or transfer assets from a traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SEP-IRA, SIMPLE IRA or qualified retirement plan into an Inherited IRA
·         Withdraw the assets as a lump sum
·         Disclaim up to 100% of the assets within 9 months of the original account owner’s death
·         Leave the assets in the plan (sometimes permissible with qualified retirement plans) 3,5

What if a trust, estate or charity is named as the beneficiary? If that is the circumstance, there are three choices:

·         Transfer assets from a traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SEP-IRA, SIMPLE IRA or qualified retirement plan into an Inherited IRA
·         Withdraw the assets as a lump sum
·         Disclaim up to 100% of the assets within 9 months of the original account owner’s death3,5

The next calendar year will be very important. Inheritors of retirement accounts have until September 30 of the year following the original account owner’s death to review and remove beneficiaries, and until December 31 of that year to divide the IRA assets among multiple beneficiaries. Usually, December 31 of the year after the original retirement plan owner’s passing is the deadline for the first RMD (Required Minimum Distribution) from an inherited traditional or Roth IRA.6

Now, how about U.S. Savings Bonds? If you are named as the primary beneficiary of a U.S. Treasury Bond, you have three options:

·         Redeem it at a financial institution (you will need your personal I.D. for this).
·         Get the security reissued in your name or the names of multiple beneficiaries. You do this via Treasury Department Form 4000, which you must sign before a certifying officer at a bank (not a notary). Then you send that signed form and a certified copy of the death certificate to a Savings Bond Processing Site.
·         Do nothing at all, as the primary beneficiary automatically becomes the bond owner when the original bond owner passes away.7

What about savings & checking accounts? Bank accounts are often payable-on-death (POD) assets or “Totten trusts.” All a beneficiary needs to claim the assets is his or her personal identification and a certified copy of the death certificate of the original account holder. There is no need for probate. (Some states limit charities and non-profits from being POD beneficiaries of bank accounts.)7

How about real estate? Lastly, it is worth noting that about a dozen states use transfer-on-death (TOD) deeds for real property, including Ohio. If you live in such a state, you have to go to the county recorder or registrar, usually with a certified copy of the death certificate and a notarized affidavit which informs the recorder or registrar that ownership of the property has changed. If the deed names multiple beneficiaries and some are dead, the surviving beneficiaries must present the recorder or registrar with certified copies of the death certificates of the deceased beneficiaries.

Best Regards,

Kevin Kroskey


Citations.
1 - www.cbsnews.com/8301-505146_162-37941197/ira-beneficiary-forms-may-be-more-important-than-your-will/ [6/10/09]        
2 www.ehow.com/info_12081482_ira-beneficiary-require-death-certificate.html [9/20/11]
3 - www.schwab.com/cms/P-1625576.3/CS13416-02_MKT13598-10_FINAL_118091.pdf?cmsid=P-1625576&cv0 [12/10]
4 - personal.fidelity.com/accounts/pdf/InheritedNonRetirementIntro.pdf [12/16/11]
5 - www.fidelity.com/ira/inherited-ira [12/16/11]
6 - www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2011/12/14/investopedia6585.DTL [12/14/11]           
7 - www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/claim-payable-on-death-assets-32436.html[12/16/11]
8 - http://www.montoyaregistry.com/Financial-Market.aspx?financial-market=who-should-inherit-your-ira-andor-401k&category=22 [12/16/11]

Popular posts from this blog

Diversification: Disciplinarian of Disciplinarians

Disciplined diversification works when you do and even when you don't want it to. Diversification in effect forces you to sell the thing that has been doing so well in your portfolio and to buy the thing that hasn't. While this makes rational sense, it is emotionally difficult to execute. Think back to the tail end of 2008--were you selling bonds and cash to buy stocks? Most likely you weren't unless your advisor or some sort of automatic trigger did it for you. Carl Richards of www.behaviorgap.com provided a good reminder of how diversification works in a recent NY Times blog post. The diversification he discusses here is more so related to equity asset-class diversification but also touches on the three basic building blocks--equities, bonds, and cash. He doesn't discuss alternative asset classes -- an asset class that doesn't fit neatly into the three basic categories -- being used to further diversification, but that's a detailed topic for another day.

The Value of Double-Checking & Monitoring Your Retirement Strategy

Motivational speaker Denis Waitley once remarked, “You must stick to your conviction, but be ready to abandon your assumptions.” That statement certainly applies to retirement planning. Your effort must not waver, yet you must also examine it from time to time. 1       Perhaps you may realize that you under-estimated your health insurance costs and will need more retirement income than previously assumed. Or perhaps, with today's low interest rates you are not getting the level of investment returns you counted on. With those factors and others in mind, here are some signs that you may need to double-check your retirement strategy.     Your portfolio lacks significant diversification. Many baby boomers are approaching retirement with portfolios heavily weighted in U.S. equities. As many of them will have long retirements and a sustained need for growth investing, you could argue that this is entirely appropriate. Yet, U.S. equities by some measures may be over-valued by

65-80 Year Olds … A New and Exciting Demography

Should today’s 70-year-old American be considered “old?” How do you define that term these days? Statistically, your average 70-year-old has just a 2% chance of dying within a year. The estimated upper limits of average life expectancy is now 97, and a rapidly growing number of 70-year-olds will live past age 100. Perhaps more importantly, today’s 70-year-olds are in much better shape than their grandparents were at the same age. In most developed countries, healthy life expectancy from age 50 is growing faster than life expectancy itself, suggesting that the period of diminished vigor and ill health towards the end of life is being compressed. A recent series of articles in the Economist magazine suggest that we need a new term for people age 65 to 80, who are generally healthy and hearty, capable of knowledge-based work on an equal footing with 25-year-olds, and who are increasingly being shunted out of the workforce as if they were invalids or, well, “old.” Indeed, the a