If you’re like most parents, your beneficiary designation on your life insurance probably lists your minor children as the secondary beneficiaries of your life insurance policy, behind your spouse in the following way:
Primary Beneficiary: Spouse
Secondary Beneficiary: My Children
This is a mistake.
What Happens When a Beneficiary is a Minor?
In Texas, children under the age of 18 lack the legal capacity to own more than a nominal amount of assets. So, for example, if you and your spouse have named your minor children as the secondary beneficiaries of your insurance policy and you both die together, the insurance company will not pay out the proceeds of the policy to your children.
Instead, a court will likely appoint a guardian to accept the money on the children’s behalf. Guardianship is expensive and time-consuming. It requires a guardian to account to the court and seek approval for virtually every action it takes on behalf of the children’s estate. Additionally, regardless of the amount you have left your children, their share of the estate will be paid out when they are 18 years old and still financially irresponsible.
Alternatives to Naming Your Minor Children as Beneficiaries
If you want your minor children to have access to the proceeds of your life insurance policies for them to be able to access the funds. In
If the life insurance policy is for a nominal amount, one option is to list someone you trust as custodian for your children under the Texas Uniform Transfers to Minors Act. The Texas Uniform Transfers to Minors Act allows a parent to name an adult who can manage the property for the minor child until they reach the age of majority. In Texas, funds can be held in a custodial account until age 21.
Ideally, you should set up a testamentary trust in your Will. This will allow you to name the trustee of the trust as the secondary beneficiary. A trust will allow you to appoint someone you choose as a Trustee to watch over the funds, invest the funds, and make distributions from it to your children for their needs according to your instructions.
An attorney can help you coordinate non-probate assets such as life insurance policies, with your Will so that the property
The post Should I Name my Minor Children as Beneficiaries of my Insurance Policy? appeared first on Rania Combs Law, PLLC.
from Texas Bar Today https://ift.tt/3pNm4Q9
via Abogado Aly Website
No comments:
Post a Comment