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How a Grandparent and Two Grandchildren May Have Insured Accounts
Totaling $800,000 |
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| Individual Accounts: |
|
Grandparent |
$100,000 |
Grandchild Number One |
$100,000 |
Grandchild Number Two |
$100,000 |
| Joint Accounts: |
|
Grandparent and Grandchild Number One |
$100,000 |
Grandparent and Grandchild Number Two |
$100,000 |
Child Number One and child Number Two |
$100,000 |
| Revocable Trust Accounts: |
|
Grandparent as Trustee for Grandchild Number One |
$100,000 |
Grandparent as Trustee for Grandchild Number Two |
$100,000 |
|
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| TOTAL= |
$800,000 |
| The same grouping of insured accounts can be arranged for a parent and two children, instead of for a grandparent and two grandchildren. |
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Special Notes |
| About Individual Retirement Accounts |
About NCUA Sanction of this Page |
| In addition to the coverage shown in the charts above, any funds in IRA or Keogh Accounts are eligible for separate insurance protection up to $100,000. They are not included in these charts because they are subject to special rules for deposits and withdrawals. |
The NCUA cannot officially sanction and approve this page, because the examples, although generally accurate, are designed to simplify in layman's terms rather complex rules that in some circumstances may only be fully understood in the statutory and regulatory context in which they were written. |
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