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Bill > HB4206


IL HB4206

IL HB4206
CHARITABLE ORG BFY-PROBATE


summary

Introduced
11/20/2025
In Committee
02/11/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

104th General Assembly

Bill Summary

Creates the Charitable Organization Beneficiary Act. Requires a holder of property in which a charitable organization that is exempt from taxation as a 501(c)(3) entity is a designated beneficiary in a nonprobate instrument (excluding wills or trusts) to notify each charitable organization within 30 business days that it may have a right to the property. Creates a process in which the charitable organization may request that it be given information about the property or that the property be delivered to the charitable organization or both. Provides duties and obligations of the holder of the property. Provides the holder of the property protection from liability for a good faith reliance on the information it receives from a designated beneficiary. Provides remedies against a holder of property for a failure or refusal to provide the requested information or transfer of property if the provisions of the Act are followed. Defines terms.

AI Summary

This bill creates the Charitable Organization Beneficiary Act, which establishes a process for handling property with a 501(c)(3) charitable organization as a beneficiary in nonprobate instruments like insurance policies, retirement accounts, or death-designated accounts. The bill requires property holders to notify a charitable beneficiary within 30 business days of the owner's death, providing basic information about the property. Charitable organizations can then submit a detailed affidavit requesting either the property itself or information about the property, which must include documentation like their tax-exempt status and good standing certificate. The bill restricts property holders from requiring additional personal information about the charity's employees or board members and prohibits them from imposing unreasonable conditions on the transfer. If a property holder fails to respond appropriately, the charitable organization can sue to recover the property or information, potentially receiving damages, penalties between $500 and $10,000, and attorney's fees. The legislation also protects property holders who act in good faith when transferring property or information based on the charity's affidavit, providing them immunity from liability if they make an honest mistake.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (9)

Last Action

House Judiciary - Civil Committee Hearing (08:00:00 2/25/2026 114 and Virtual Room 1) (on 02/25/2026)

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