Click to return to BOL home page
Banker Store eCard Exchange Vendor Connect Career Connect Learning Connect Bankers Information Network

   

















    Site Map

    Our Sponsors

    Home














Print Friendly! Email This Article! Discuss NOW!



Ownership When Parent Opens a Minor Account
Answer by John Burnett, BOL Guru
Guru BIOS

Question: When a parent opens an account for a minor and uses the minor's Social Security number, but only the parent signs on the account, is the ownership of the account joint or individual?

Answer: Why would you allow such an account-opening process? The minor can't contract for the account in many states, and certainly cannot contract if the kid can't even sign his/her name! The parent is not a legal guardian without a court's blessing, and cannot contract in the name of the child, either. The FDIC would also have problems with its determination of ownership for insurance coverage.

Unless your state recognizes deposit accounts for minors (and even if it does, when the minor is too young to sign the deposit contract), parents can open POD or Totten trust accounts in their own names, naming the minor as the beneficiary. They can also open an account under your state's UTMA statute, assuming the role of custodian.

First published on BankersOnline.com 07/18/05




Home | Compliance | Lending | Operations | Security | Marketing | Technology | eBanking
BOL Archives    Privacy Policy    Important Disclaimer   Recommend This Site !   Contact Us


BankersOnline is a free service made possible by the generous support of our advertisers and sponsors. Advertisers and sponsors are not responsible for site content. Please help us keep BankersOnline FREE to all banking professionals. Support our advertisers and sponsors by clicking through to learn more about their products and services.