Are joint accounts frozen on death?
Sarah Richards
Published Apr 05, 2026
Are the assets frozen if someone on a joint bank account dies? No. Any remaining assets automatically transfer to the other accountholder, so long as the account is set up that way, which most are. Check with the financial institution if you're uncertain.
Can you withdraw money from a joint account if one person dies?
Most joint bank accounts include automatic rights of survivorship, which means that after one account signer dies, the remaining signer (or signers) retain ownership of the money in the account. The surviving primary account owner can continue using the account, and the money in it, without any interruptions.What happens when someone dies and you have a joint account?
Jointly Owned AccountsIf you own an account jointly with someone else, then after one of you dies, in most cases the surviving co-owner will automatically become the account's sole owner. The account will not need to go through probate before it can be transferred to the survivor.
Can creditors go after joint bank accounts after death?
Can a creditor go after joint tenancy assets? Joint tenancy (with rights of survivorship) is extremely common between spouses and in nearly all cases creditors very little to no rights against property held in joint tenancy between the deceased person and the joint tenant.Who freezes a deceased person's bank account?
Closing Deceased AccountsUsually, a bank cannot close a deceased account until after the person's estate has gone through probate. The probate court will appoint an executor or administrator if one is not named in the deceased's will.