Money Matters
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I am starting a new IRA, and I need to assign beneficiaries.....and then, I wondered....do I? If the money from my account goes to my spouse and children automatically when I pass away, why do I need to write them down as beneficiaries? Isn't it just easier to let it happen naturally? I'm just thinking if I list my husband as primary and my 2 children as contingent, then when the next baby comes (I'm currently pregnant) and I forget to update it, then that 3rd child would think I didn't love them as much. Sounds dumb, but I really am serious. Why take the time to do it when the law is going to give it to those people automatically anyway?
Re: Beneficiaries
According to the terms of your Custodial Agreement, your default beneficiary will be your spouse. In the event you have no spouse, your beneficiary(ies) will be your children equally. If any child does not survive you, the deceased child’s share will go to his or her children (your grandchildren) or, if none, the surviving children equally. If no children or grandchildren survive you, your beneficiary will be your estate.
This is with American Funds. Yours may have something similar.
Beyond that. Never assume what will happen. At least check. And these things can be repeatedly updated. Usually online. I originally had my parents. Then took them off and added my wife. May eventually add the kiddo when he's older. My advisor advises against adding him for now in case we died early. @hoffse could probably explain why better than I could.
Not putting a beneficiary just makes it more hassle than it needs to be.
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It's best to set things up to pass outside of probate as much as possible, and naming a beneficiary on a bank account or retirement account is one of the easiest and cheapest ways of doing it. It takes virtually no time, and it does not take a lawyer. Most banks will let you change beneficiaries online or by mailing in a simple form.
Keep in mind too that probate doesn't just take a long time, but it can be expensive for your heirs. In my state an estate has to remain open for a minimum of 6 months in order for lenders to make claims, and we are on the short side. Some states require estates to remain open for a full year or more. Meanwhile that money is in limbo and your heirs are paying lawyers to manage everything. Hopefully your heirs find a lawyer who only bills when required - and most lawyers are in the camp. But there are also some less scrupulous lawyers out there who will bill the daylights out of an estate. Estates are easy clients because the original owner of the money is dead, and the lawyers know EXACTLY how much money is in the estate because they are the ones probating it. If their bills aren't paid by the executor, then the lawyers may have a claim on the estate. You see where I'm going with this. This kind of thing happened with my grandmother's estate. My grandmother had a lot of assets to probate, and the lawyer dragged things out, flamed some internal family conflicts, and kept the estate open for a full 3 years. She managed to find something to bill for every month for those 3 years. My dad mostly stayed out of it because his siblings wanted to be the ones handling everything, but he eventually intervened when he added everything up and realized she had cost the estate over 6 figures in legal fees. The lesson here is to keep as much out of probate as possible.
I mean this in the nicest way possible, but the notion that you might forget to add a future child is a poor excuse. Checking your beneficiaries takes next to no time, and it's something that you should do every year. Maybe you do it on January 1 or you do it when you are filing your taxes, or whatever. Estate plans as a whole should be examined every time somebody in your immediate family is born or dies.
This is all good information, especially about probate, people claiming you owe them money, and racking up legal fees. I will definitely fill out the beneficiary forms for this new IRA! Thank you!!!