Your Bank Account Freezes When You Die — Unless You File This 1 Free Form When you die, your bank account does not automatically transfer to your family. It freezes. The bank will not release the funds until a probate court issues an order — a process that takes six months to two years in most states and costs between 2 and 5 percent of the total estate value in court and attorney fees. There is one form that stops this entirely. It is called a Payable-on-Death designation — POD. It is a one-page document filed directly with your bank. It costs nothing. It takes fifteen minutes. And it transfers your account balance directly to the person you name the moment your death certificate is presented — no court, no attorney, no delay. Most seniors have never filed it because nobody at the bank mentioned it. Tellers are not required to tell you it exists. The account opens without it. The freeze happens after you are gone — and by then, your family is the one dealing with the consequences. This video covers exactly how the POD designation works, why most bank accounts go through probate unnecessarily, how the form interacts with your will and your estate plan, and what happens when the named beneficiary predeceases you. If you have a bank account and have never filed a POD designation — watch this before your next deposit. #PayableOnDeath #BankAccountFreeze #ProbateAvoidance #EstatePlanning #seniorfinance EDUCATIONAL DISCLAIMER: This video is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or financial advice. Probate laws and POD designation rules vary by state and financial institution. Consult a licensed estate planning attorney for guidance specific to your situation.