IRAs, 401(k)s, and Beneficiary Assets

Retirement accounts and other beneficiary assets do not pass through your will or your trust — they go straight to whoever is named on the beneficiary form. That is convenient, and it is also where a lot of plans quietly go wrong: a stale beneficiary designation overrides everything else you signed. Inherited IRAs also come with the 10-year payout rule and real tax consequences. These guides cover how IRAs, 401(k)s, annuities, and payable-on-death accounts fit into your plan, when to name the trust and when not to, and what heirs face when they inherit these accounts. To check your own designations, talk to Eric.

IRAs and 401(k)s

Beneficiary designations

More guides

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Want a straight read on where you stand?

Talk to Eric. A free 30-minute call, no pitch. He’ll tell you where you’re exposed, what it would cost to fix, and what you can skip.

Talk to Eric