close
    beneficiary designation

    0  Views: 462 Answers: 2 Posted: 14 years ago

    2 Answers

    You would actually need to designate the names of your beneficiaries in the event you die.  Beneficiaries can be any one you'd like to designate to take over the ownership of your properties such as a house, stocks, bonds, annuities,IRA's, Roth IRA's, etc. 


    Please be detailed when you provide information regarding your beneficiaries.  You should have the D.O.B. (date of birth), social security number, relationship to you, and the full legal name and address.  Just putting the legal name alone is not enough.  Why?  George Foreman has 5 sons and all of them have the name "George Foreman."   It'd be a mess if the older George Foreman died and left the estate solely to a "George Foreman."


    Make it easy for your loved ones to make the determination as to who the assets of the deceased should go to.


    Without naming the beneficiaries, the estate would go through probate and God only knows how the judge would determine who the next of kin is.


     

    What is your question?


    Top contributors in Insurance category

     
    ROMOS
    Answers: 15 / Questions: 0
    Karma: 1110
     
    country bumpkin
    Answers: 13 / Questions: 0
    Karma: 795
     
    Colleen
    Answers: 38 / Questions: 0
    Karma: 750
     
    Benthere
    Answers: 1 / Questions: 0
    Karma: 540
    > Top contributors chart

    Unanswered Questions

    Go8 ca cuoc online uy tin
    Answers: 0 Views: 7 Rating: 0
    188BET SN
    Answers: 0 Views: 15 Rating: 0
    Vũ Minh Phúc
    Answers: 0 Views: 30 Rating: 0
    88clb me
    Answers: 0 Views: 17 Rating: 0
    JL3 - Legit na Online Casino
    Answers: 0 Views: 20 Rating: 0
    Sunwin – Cổng Game Bài, Slot
    Answers: 0 Views: 26 Rating: 0
    pu88io
    Answers: 0 Views: 24 Rating: 0
    Rồng Bạch Kim
    Answers: 0 Views: 23 Rating: 0
    > More questions...
    505236
    questions
    747798
    answers
    844989
    users