To get your signature notarized, take your driver’s license or state identification card to a bank and fill out Form PD F 4000. Sign Form PD F 4000 in front of the certifying officer, who will sign and stamp it.
What is the procedure for changing the owner of my savings bonds?
The name of a single owner or two co-owners will be printed on a US savings bond. The savings bond can only be cashed by a listed owner. To change the owner of a savings bond, a reissue request must be made to the US Treasury together with the bond.
What is the procedure for adding a beneficiary to a savings bond?
You must register ownership of the securities in “beneficiary” form in order to do so. Simply put, you register ownership in your name, followed by the phrases “payable on death to” and the beneficiary’s name. A person, not an entity, must be the recipient. Parts 315.6 and 353.6 of the 31 C.F.R.) You must state if the beneficiary is a minor, for example, “payable on death to Jasmine Martin, a juvenile.” Ownership will be transferred to the person you named after your death.
You’ll have complete control over these assets, just as you do with corporate securities. To sell or give away the securities, you don’t need the beneficiary’s permission, and you can name a new beneficiary at any moment by filling out new ownership documentation.
There can only be one principal owner and one payable-on-death beneficiary, which is a significant limitation when adding a payable-on-death beneficiary. If the securities are co-owned by two or more peoplefor example, you and your spouseyou can’t specify a payable-on-death beneficiary. In that case, the best you can do is create a right of survivorship, so that when the first co-owner dies, the remaining co-owner receives the securities. The survivor could then designate a beneficiary.
What is the procedure for changing the name on a savings bond?
How to Change the Names on US Savings Bonds
- For instructions on how to modify the registered name on your securities, go to “Manage Account.”
- Take any signature-verification forms to your bank for a Treasury-approved verification.
Are there any beneficiaries for US Savings Bonds?
Savings bonds are frequently registered in beneficiary form, meaning the owner designated a payable-on-death beneficiary to inherit them. A beneficiary, like a surviving co-owner, has three options: have it reissued in their name, with a co-owner, or with a POD beneficiary.
Is it possible to choose a beneficiary for my TreasuryDirect account?
You can name beneficiaries for your retirement funds if you have them with a private financial institution. Non-retirement accounts can also be designated as Pay On Death (POD) or Transfer On Death (TOD) at some financial institutions.
Who is the owner of a US Savings Bond?
There is only one owner listed. Only that person is allowed to conduct business. The bond becomes part of his or her inheritance if he or she dies.
This is referred to as exclusive ownership in the case of electronic bonds.
Single ownership for paper bonds.
Transactions can only be made by the owner.
If he or she passes away, the beneficiary becomes the sole owner of the property.
An entity cannot be the beneficiary.
Although each owner may cash without the other’s knowledge or agreement, most other transactions require both owners’ signatures.
Is it possible to transfer the ownership of US savings bonds?
Yes. The owner of EE and I Bonds can transfer them to another person with a TreasuryDirect account; however, you must wait five business days from the purchase date to do so.
A savings bond can be transferred to another TreasuryDirect account in whole or in part. See What is the procedure for transferring savings bonds from one TreasuryDirect account to another?
What happens if I transfer savings bonds to another TreasuryDirect customer? Will the recipient’s purchasing limit be affected?
When you transfer savings bonds to another customer, the value of the transfer is deducted from the yearly purchase limit for each savings bond type for the year in which the transfer happens.
Is it possible to move marketable securities from one TreasuryDirect account to another or to a broker/dealer account?
Yes. Marketable Securities can be transferred in $100 increments. You can send a portion or the entire value of a single investment or a group of securities to a single recipient or financial institution. See What is the procedure for transferring marketable securities from my TreasuryDirect account?
No, you must transfer marketable securities from your TreasuryDirect account to a broker/dealer account in order to sell them.
The securities can be sold by the broker/dealer on your behalf.
Is it possible to transfer marketable securities from a non-TreasuryDirect account to my TreasuryDirect account?
Yes. You can contact your broker to have marketable securities from another account transferred as an Incoming External Transfer to your TreasuryDirect account. Customer Service will handle your request and add issued securities to your Current Holdings. For maturity and interest payments, incoming transfers are issued with your primary bank information as the payment destination (if applicable). For specific instructions, see Learn More About Transfers.
Is it possible to transfer marketable securities from my old TreasuryDirect account to my new TreasuryDirect account?
Yes. Complete a Security Move Request, FS Form 5179, to transfer assets from Legacy Treasury Direct to your TreasuryDirect account. Incoming transfers are deposited into your TreasuryDirect account’s Current Holdings.
What happens if I transfer a marketable security that was initially slated for deposit in my C of I before it matures?
Any purchases you have scheduled utilizing Zero-Percent C of I as the source of funds may be impacted if you elect to transfer a marketable security prior to maturity. If funds are inadequate to cover the purchase request, the purchases may be canceled.
What if the form of registration for transferring marketable securities from an outside broker to my TreasuryDirect account is invalid?
We shall refuse any inbound security transfer request that has an invalid form of registration.
What if the marketable security I want to move in from another outside account is registered with the words “OR,” “AND,” or “With Right of Survivorship”?
Regardless of the method of registration prior to the transfer, a security transferred from an outside account into a TreasuryDirect account will be transferred in the name of the individual account owner in single owner form. The registration can be changed to any allowable registration after the transfer is accomplished.
What happens if the person who formed the bond dies?
You can register a savings bond in your own name as the owner and the payable-on-death beneficiary as your chosen heir. While you are alive, only you have redemption and transaction rights as the owner. When you die, your specified beneficiary becomes the owner of the bond, with full redemption and transaction rights. If all named owners and beneficiaries pass away, the bond becomes part of the estate of the last person to pass away, and it is passed down to that person’s heirs.
What is the procedure for transferring a savings bond to a trust?
- To transfer Series I bonds to a trust, one of the bond’s owners or co-owners must be the living trust’s creator or beneficiary. Series I bonds cannot be transferred to a trust that is not mentioned as the bond’s owner.
- If the co-owner or beneficiary has not predeceased the owner, savings bonds with a named co-owner or beneficiary escape probate and pass directly to them. Co-ownership or beneficiaryship on a savings bond achieves the same result as putting the bonds in a living trust.
What is the procedure for cashing a savings bond that is not in my name?
If you are not identified as the owner or co-owner on the bond, you must produce legal evidence or other documentation to establish you are entitled to cash the bond, regardless of where you cash it. (Legal evidence is not returned.)
It is important to note that savings bonds cannot be transferred. You can’t cash a bond that belongs to someone else or that you bought on an internet auction site. (See Death of a Savings Bond Owner if you inherit a bond through the death of the bond owner.)
