Transfer on Death (TOD)

Client Recommendations High Relevance

An account registration allowing securities to transfer directly to a named beneficiary upon the account owner's death, bypassing probate. The owner retains complete control during their lifetime, and the beneficiary has no ownership rights until death occurs. TOD designations can be changed or revoked at any time.

Example

A 72-year-old retiree designates her two adult children as equal TOD beneficiaries on her $800,000 brokerage account. She maintains full control to trade, withdraw, or change beneficiaries during her lifetime. Upon her death, the account transfers directly to her children in equal shares without going through probate.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse TOD with joint ownership (JTWROS). With TOD, the beneficiary has NO current rights and cannot access or control the account until the owner dies. With JTWROS, all owners have immediate equal ownership and access. TOD beneficiaries are like sealed envelope recipients: they only get the contents when you die.

How This Is Tested

  • Understanding that TOD avoids probate but beneficiary has no rights until death
  • Distinguishing TOD from joint ownership forms (JTWROS, tenants in common)
  • Recognizing that owner retains full control and can change beneficiaries anytime
  • Identifying TOD as an estate planning tool for smooth asset transfer
  • Understanding beneficiary rights begin only at owner's death, not before

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Robert, age 68, wants to ensure his $600,000 investment account passes directly to his daughter Sarah when he dies, avoiding probate delays and legal costs. However, he wants to maintain complete control over the account during his lifetime, including the ability to withdraw funds or change his mind about the beneficiary. Which account registration would BEST meet Robert's objectives?

Question 2

Which of the following statements about Transfer on Death (TOD) account registrations is accurate?

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Question 3

Maria establishes a TOD registration on her $400,000 brokerage account, naming her two sons as equal beneficiaries. Three years later, she decides she wants to add her daughter as a third equal beneficiary and reduce her sons' shares accordingly. What is required for Maria to make this change?

Question 4

All of the following statements about Transfer on Death (TOD) account registrations are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment adviser is explaining different account registration options to a client who wants to ensure her daughter receives her investment account at death. The adviser compares Transfer on Death (TOD), Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship (JTWROS), and Tenants in Common (TIC) registrations. Which of the following statements accurately distinguish these registration types?

1. With TOD, the owner retains sole control and the beneficiary has no current rights; with JTWROS, all owners have immediate equal access and control
2. TOD avoids probate; JTWROS avoids probate; TIC does NOT avoid probate
3. TOD beneficiary designations can be changed unilaterally by the owner; JTWROS ownership cannot be changed without all owners' consent
4. With TIC, the account passes to the deceased owner's estate at death; with JTWROS, it passes to surviving joint owner(s)

💡 Memory Aid

TOD is like a sealed envelope with a beneficiary's name on it. You keep full control of what's inside while alive (change it, spend it, rewrite the name on the envelope), but at death it automatically opens and delivers to them, skipping the probate courtroom. Remember: TOD = The Owner Decides (can change beneficiary anytime). Beneficiary = "No Rights Until Death" (NRUD).

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: