Craig Lundquist and Kristin Becker photo
Ideal Wealth Advisors logo

Craig Lundquist, MBA, ChFC®, CRPC®

VP of Wealth Management

craig.lundquist@lpl.com

651-773-2757

 

Kristin Becker

Senior Administrative Assistant

kristin.becker@lpl.com

651-773-2821

 

Ideal Wealth Advisors

Located at Ideal Credit Union

8499 Tamarack Road

Woodbury, MN 55125

 

CRPC conferred by College for Financial Planning

November/December 2021

Beneficiary Designations: Still the Ones?

Multi Generation Family Sitting On Sofa With Newborn Baby

Your personal circumstances may have changed significantly since you chose beneficiaries for your insurance policies or retirement accounts. Beneficiary designations name the person or persons who will receive the account proceeds upon your death. Reviewing your choices annually should be on your year-end to-do list.


What Can Change?
Life events, such as divorce or remarriage, should trigger a review of beneficiary designations on insurance policies and retirement accounts. Why? Beneficiary designations supercede any instructions in your will. If you fail to change a beneficiary, the original beneficiary you designated will receive the proceeds -- even if you've named someone else in your will to inherit the account.


New Faces
As time goes on, you may want to include new people as beneficiaries. For example, you may want to name grandchildren as contingent beneficiaries. Contingent beneficiaries will receive the account proceeds if the primary beneficiary dies with you or before you. Alternatively, you might want to support a charity using life insurance proceeds.


Avoid Unintended Consequences
Equal (per capita) distribution is typically the default for retirement accounts, and this can result in consequences you didn't intend. Let's say you have three children who are equal beneficiaries of your account, and each child will get an equal share of the proceeds upon your death. But what if one of your children dies before you? Under per capita distribution, your remaining two children will share the account proceeds, potentially leaving the deceased child's own children (your grandchildren) with nothing. By specifying per stirpes distribution instead, a deceased child's share will go to his or her children.


Other Accounts
Financial institutions and insurers may offer an option to choose Transfer-on-Death (TOD) and Payable-on-Death (POD) accounts. These accounts allow the account holder to name who will receive the account balance or payout after death. The TOD option is often used for stocks, bonds and brokerage accounts, while a POD designation is generally used for bank accounts.


An Annual Review
Make a list of all accounts and policies that require beneficiary designations. Check them each year to confirm they're up to date.

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Securities and advisory services are offered through LPL Financial (LPL), a registered investment advisor and broker-dealer (member FINRA/SIPC). Insurance products are offered through LPL or its licensed affiliates. Ideal Credit Union and Ideal Wealth Advisors are not registered as a broker/dealer or investment advisor. Registered representatives of LPL offer products and services using Ideal Wealth Advisors, and may also be employees of Ideal Credit Union. These products and services are being offered through LPL or its affiliates, which are separate entities from and not affiliates of Ideal Credit Union or Ideal Wealth Advisors. Securities and insurance offered through LPL or its affiliates are:

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