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Digital Assets

What Happens to Your Digital Accounts When You Die?

Your digital life does not disappear when you die. Most platforms have no automatic inheritance process, and crypto with no documented access instructions is gone forever. Here is how to fix that.

April 7, 2026|7 min read|By DocSats

When you die, your digital life does not disappear. Your email inbox, social media, cloud storage, and crypto wallets all keep existing. But accessing them or passing them on to your family is a legal and technical minefield that most estate plans completely ignore.

The platform-by-platform reality

Google

Google Inactive Account Manager lets you designate people who can download your data if your account goes inactive. Without setting this up, your family may be able to request access with a death certificate, but it is not guaranteed.

Apple

Apple introduced a Legacy Contact feature that lets you designate someone who can access your iCloud account. Without a Legacy Contact set up, your iCloud data is effectively inaccessible. Even Apple cannot provide access without the right credentials or legacy authorization.

Facebook

Facebook lets you designate a Legacy Contact who can manage your memorialized account. They cannot read your messages or log in as you.

$140B
in Bitcoin estimated permanently lost
3.8M
Bitcoin wallets with no known access
0
platforms with automatic inheritance by default

Cryptocurrency: the highest-stakes problem

Crypto is fundamentally different from every other digital asset. Banks have account recovery processes. Bitcoin has neither. If your family does not have your seed phrase, your crypto is permanently inaccessible. Not frozen. Gone, forever, from the financial system.

The solution requires care. You need to document access instructions in a way that is secure enough not to be exploited while you are alive, but accessible enough that your executor can use it after you are gone. This typically means a sealed letter stored with your estate documents, referencing where credentials are stored, not including them in the Will itself (which becomes public record in probate).

What your Will can do for digital assets

The practical checklist

DocSats includes digital asset provisions in all Will documents, prompting you to name a digital executor and reference your access documentation.

Your digital life needs a plan too.

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