Germline variants in RUNX1, GATA2 and DDX41 may confer a predisposition to hereditary haematopoietic malignancies (HHMs) such as MDS and AML yet have distinct age ranges of malignancy diagnosis and a highly variable overall risk for leukemogenesis. The increased awareness and identification of carriers of these germline variants, particularly before development of malignancy, has changed the way in which individuals and families need to be managed in the clinic. Individuals need lifelong monitoring and may also need modification to treatments when malignancy does develop, compared to sporadic counterparts. Gaps in understanding pre-malignant states in HHM syndromes have hampered efforts to design effective clinical surveillance regimes, provide personalized pre-emptive treatments, and appropriate counselling to patients.