Attorney Sarah reviewed her client Michael’s will. Everything was there: house, investments, retirement accounts, personal property. But Michael had $180,000 in cryptocurrency, $45,000 in domain names, a profitable blog earning $4K/month, 15 years of family photos in the cloud, and 200+ online accounts.

None of it was mentioned in his will.

“What happens to my Bitcoin?” Michael asked.

Sarah had to tell him: “Without proper documentation, your family will face legal battles to access any of it. Some may be lost forever.”

Digital assets include everything from social media profiles to cryptocurrency wallets. Seniors today increasingly hold valuable digital assets—everything from online banking, cryptocurrencies, digital photos, emails, to online medical records.

This comprehensive guide covers how to properly include digital assets in your will, estate planning strategies for online accounts, legal requirements, and practical implementation.

Understanding Digital Assets in Estate Planning

What Qualifies as a Digital Asset?

Financial digital assets: – Cryptocurrency (Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc.) – Online bank accounts – Investment accounts (Robinhood, E*TRADE) – PayPal, Venmo, Cash App balances – Payment processor accounts (Stripe, Square)

Business digital assets: – Domain names – Websites and blogs – E-commerce businesses – Social media accounts with revenue – YouTube channels (monetized) – Podcast sponsorships – Affiliate marketing sites – Digital products (courses, ebooks)

Personal digital assets: – Email accounts – Social media profiles – Cloud storage (photos, documents) – Digital photo libraries – Music and movie libraries – Gaming accounts – Loyalty program points

Intellectual property: – Copyrights (digital content) – Trademarks – Digital art and NFTs – Software and apps – Website content – Music and video files

Why Digital Assets Matter in Estate Planning

Financial value: – Can exceed traditional assets – Cryptocurrency holdings – Online business revenue – Domain portfolio value – Monetized content

Sentimental value: – Decades of family photos – Email correspondence – Personal writings – Creative works – Memories preserved digitally

Legal complexity: – Each platform has different policies – Terms of Service restrictions – Access challenges – Probate complications

Legal Framework: RUFADAA

Understanding RUFADAA

California has adopted the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA), which provides a legal framework for handling digital assets upon a person’s death. This law grants executors the authority to access digital assets if it’s specified in the deceased’s will or estate plan.

What RUFADAA does: – Gives fiduciaries legal authority to manage digital assets – Allows executors to access online accounts – Overrides some Terms of Service restrictions – 47 states have adopted (as of 2026)

Three-tier system:

Tier 1: User instruction via online tool If you die living in a state that has adopted RUFADAA, then your legal representatives will have access to your online accounts if you have activated a setting within the online account (an “online tool”) in which you provide a direction to disclose the contents of your account upon your death.

Examples: Google Inactive Account Manager, Facebook Legacy Contact

Tier 2: Will or trust provisions If your Will specifically allows your legal representative to access your online accounts.

Tier 3: Terms of Service Platform’s default policy if no user instruction or will provision.

Priority: Online tool > Will provision > ToS

How to Include Digital Assets in Your Will

Method 1: Digital Asset Clause in Will

Sample clause:

ARTICLE VII: DIGITAL ASSETS

I grant my Executor full authority to access, manage, distribute, and dispose of my digital assets as defined under the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act, including but not limited to:

(a) Email accounts and electronic communications
(b) Social media accounts and profiles
(c) Online financial accounts
(d) Cloud storage accounts and digital files
(e) Cryptocurrency and digital currency holdings
(f) Domain names and websites
(g) Digital intellectual property
(h) Online business accounts
(i) Gaming and entertainment accounts
(j) Any other digital assets or online accounts

My Executor shall have the authority to:
- Access all accounts and digital property
- Download, copy, and transfer digital content
- Manage, maintain, or close accounts
- Collect any monetary value
- Distribute digital assets according to my wishes
- Take any actions necessary to manage digital estate

Specific digital asset distributions:
1. My cryptocurrency holdings to [beneficiary name]
2. My photography website and associated accounts to [beneficiary name]
3. My digital photo library to [beneficiary name]
4. All other digital assets to be distributed as part of residuary estate

Critical elements: – Explicit grant of authority – Reference to RUFADAA – Comprehensive list of asset types – Specific powers granted – Beneficiary designations

Method 2: Digital Asset Memo (Recommended)

Instead of listing digital assets directly in a will, you can create a Digital Assets Memo. This document would contain all relevant login information and instructions for your digital executor and can be updated as needed.

Why separate memo is better:

Wills become public record: Since a will becomes public record during probate, listing sensitive login details in the will itself could expose you to risks like fraud or identity theft.

Benefits of separate memo: – Private (not filed with court) – Easily updated (without attorney) – Contains passwords safely – Detailed instructions possible – No probate delays for updates

Will references memo:

ARTICLE VII: DIGITAL ASSETS

I have prepared a separate memorandum titled "Digital Asset Inventory and Instructions" dated [date], which contains a comprehensive list of my digital assets, account information, and specific instructions for their management and distribution.

This memorandum is incorporated by reference into this Will. My Executor shall follow the instructions contained in the most recent version of this memorandum, which is stored [location].

I grant my Executor full authority under RUFADAA to access and manage all digital assets described in the memorandum and any others discovered during estate administration.

Memo stored separately: – Safe deposit box – With attorney – Encrypted digital file – Password manager – Fireproof home safe

Method 3: Digital Asset Trust

Creating a trust specifically for digital assets can offer more control and privacy. Unlike wills, trusts are not filed with the court. The trust remains private, protecting sensitive data from public exposure during probate.

When to use digital asset trust: – High-value digital assets – Privacy critical – Complex distribution wishes – Want to avoid probate – Business continuity needs

Trust structure:

THE [YOUR NAME] DIGITAL ASSET TRUST

SECTION 1: TRUST PROPERTY
This trust shall hold the following digital assets:
- All cryptocurrency holdings
- Domain portfolio
- Online business [name]
- Monetized YouTube channel
- Digital intellectual property
- [List all significant digital assets]

SECTION 2: TRUSTEE POWERS
The Trustee shall have authority to:
- Access all accounts associated with trust assets
- Manage cryptocurrency holdings
- Continue operating online businesses
- Collect revenue from digital assets
- Make distributions to beneficiaries
- Transfer ownership of digital property

SECTION 3: DISTRIBUTION
[Detailed instructions for how digital assets distributed]

Benefits: – Avoids probate – Private (not public record) – Professional management – Business continuity – Asset protection

Creating Your Digital Asset Inventory

Comprehensive Inventory Template

To create an effective digital estate plan, you first need a comprehensive inventory of your assets. In 2026, seniors have access to convenient tools that help catalog accounts and assets securely.

Inventory structure:

DIGITAL ASSET INVENTORY
[Your Name]
Last Updated: [Date]
Location: [Where this document stored]

=====================================
SECTION 1: FINANCIAL ACCOUNTS
=====================================

1. Bank Accounts
   - Chase Checking
     Account #: [number]
     Login: [stored in password manager]
     2FA: SMS to phone
     Value: $XX,XXX

2. Cryptocurrency
   - Coinbase Account
     Email: [email]
     Password: [password manager]
     2FA: Authenticator app
     Value: $XX,XXX
     IMPORTANT: Hardware wallet in safe, PIN: [location]

=====================================
SECTION 2: BUSINESS ASSETS
=====================================

1. Websites/Domains
   - PhotographyBlog.com
     Registrar: GoDaddy
     Hosting: Bluehost
     Revenue: $4,000/month
     Instructions: [Continue operation or sell]

2. Online Business
   - Shopify Store: [name]
     Login: [password manager]
     Revenue: $X,XXX/month
     Instructions: [Transfer to son John]

=====================================
SECTION 3: PERSONAL ACCOUNTS
=====================================

1. Email
   - Gmail: [email address]
     Inactive Account Manager: Set up
     Trusted contact: [spouse name]

2. Social Media
   - Facebook: [account]
     Legacy Contact: [name]
     Preference: Memorialize

=====================================
SECTION 4: STORAGE & CONTENT
=====================================

1. Cloud Storage
   - Google Drive (2TB)
     Contains: Family photos, tax docs
     Legacy Contact: [name]

=====================================
SECTION 5: SUBSCRIPTIONS
=====================================

[List all paid subscriptions]

=====================================
INSTRUCTIONS FOR EXECUTOR
=====================================

PRIORITY 1 - Within 7 days:
- Access password manager (emergency access)
- Download cryptocurrency before value changes
- Access online business accounts
- Download family photos from cloud storage

PRIORITY 2 - Within 30 days:
- Transfer cryptocurrency to [beneficiary]
- Transfer domain portfolio to [beneficiary]
- Continue online business or begin sale process
- Cancel unnecessary subscriptions

PRIORITY 3 - Within 90 days:
- Distribute remaining digital assets per will
- Close non-essential accounts
- Archive important digital content

SPECIFIC BEQUESTS:
- Cryptocurrency → [Daughter Sarah]
- Photography website → [Son John]
- Digital photo library → [All children, shared]
- Domain portfolio → [Niece Emily]

Tools for Managing Inventory

Password managers: – LastPass (with emergency access) – 1Password (with recovery kit) – Dashlane (with emergency contacts)

Digital estate planning services: – Everplans – GoodTrust – Cake – AfterVault

Benefits: – Centralized storage – Encrypted security – Emergency access features – Regular update reminders

Appointing a Digital Executor

In California you can appoint the executor in your will, the trustee of your trust, or your power of attorney agent as your digital executor. A probate court can also appoint one for you if doing so will help sort out your estate.

Same Person or Separate?

Same executor for all: Pros: – Simplicity – One person responsible – Clear authority

Cons: – May not be tech-savvy – Business knowledge lacking – Overwhelmed with duties

Separate digital executor: Pros: – Tech-savvy person – Business expertise – Specialized knowledge

Cons: – Coordination needed – Potential conflicts – More complexity

Qualifications for Digital Executor

Should be: – Tech-savvy and comfortable with technology – Trustworthy with sensitive information – Organized and detail-oriented – Younger (likely to outlive you) – Familiar with your digital life – Available to act (not too busy)

Ideal candidates: – Adult child who works in tech – IT professional in family – Business partner (for business assets) – Trusted friend with expertise

Will Clause Appointing Digital Executor

ARTICLE III: APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTORS

I appoint my spouse, [Name], as Executor of this Will. If [spouse] is unable or unwilling to serve, I appoint [backup].

I appoint [Name], as Digital Executor with specific authority over my digital assets and online accounts. My Digital Executor shall have all powers granted under RUFADAA and as described in Article VII of this Will.

If my Digital Executor is unable or unwilling to serve, the general Executor shall assume digital asset responsibilities.

Platform-Specific Estate Planning Tools

Platforms such as Google and Facebook offer their own legacy management tools. Google’s Inactive Account Manager lets you specify who gets access to your account after a period of inactivity. Facebook’s Legacy Contact allows someone to manage your profile in a memorialized state.

Set Up Now (Highest Priority)

Google Inactive Account Manager: – 10 minutes to set up – Designate up to 10 contacts – Choose data to share – Set inactivity timeout – Free and effective

Apple Legacy Contact: – 5 minutes to set up – Designate up to 5 contacts – They receive access key – 3-year access window – Includes iCloud data

Facebook Legacy Contact: – Designate one person – They can manage memorialized profile – Cannot access messages – Can update profile info

Meta (Instagram): – Similar to Facebook – Memorialization available – No content transfer

Will Language Referencing Platform Tools

ARTICLE VII: DIGITAL ASSETS (continued)

I have activated the following platform-specific legacy tools:

1. Google Inactive Account Manager
   Trusted contacts: [names]
   These individuals have authority to access data specified in my Google account settings.

2. Apple Legacy Contact
   Designated contacts: [names]
   These individuals possess access keys and will provide death certificate to Apple.

3. Facebook Legacy Contact
   Designated contact: [name]
   This individual has authority to manage my memorialized Facebook profile.

My Executor shall coordinate with these designated individuals to ensure proper management of accounts according to my wishes and platform policies.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Putting Passwords in Will

Wrong:

My Gmail password is XYZ123456
My bank login is ABC789

Why wrong: Will becomes public record during probate. Passwords exposed to anyone who requests court records.

Right: Reference separate private document with credentials.

Mistake 2: Not Updating Regularly

Problem: – New accounts created – Passwords changed – Beneficiaries change – Laws change – Platforms update policies

Solution: Annual review and update.

Mistake 3: Conflicting Instructions

Example: – Will says “delete Facebook” – Legacy Contact set to memorialize – Spouse wants to keep it

Result: Confusion, delays, family conflict.

Solution: Ensure will, memo, and platform tools align.

Mistake 4: Ignoring Terms of Service

Problem: – Some platforms prohibit transfers – Licenses non-transferable – Account sharing violations

Reality: RUFADAA helps but doesn’t override all ToS.

Solution: Understand limits, plan accordingly.

Mistake 5: No 2FA Planning

Problem: – Executor has passwords – But can’t access due to 2FA – Phone locked – Authenticator app inaccessible

Solution: Document 2FA methods, backup codes, hardware keys.

Best Practices Summary

Every power of attorney, every will, every trust should provide an appointed fiduciary or agent access to online accounts and digital assets.

Recommended approach:

1. Will includes: – Digital asset clause with RUFADAA authority – Reference to separate memo – Digital executor appointment – General distribution instructions

2. Separate Digital Asset Memo contains: – Complete inventory – Login credentials – 2FA information – Specific instructions – Updated regularly

3. Platform tools activated: – Google Inactive Account Manager – Apple Legacy Contact – Facebook Legacy Contact – Any others available

4. Password manager configured: – Emergency access set up – Trusted contacts designated – All credentials stored – 2FA backup codes included

5. Regular updates: Digital estate plans require regular reviews, especially when new accounts are added or laws change. Set reminders in your calendar to revisit your plans annually or after major life events.

Implementation Checklist

Week 1: Inventory

  • ☐ List all financial accounts
  • ☐ List all online businesses/revenue
  • ☐ List all personal accounts
  • ☐ List all cloud storage
  • ☐ List all subscriptions
  • ☐ Identify valuable digital assets
  • ☐ Document passwords and 2FA

Week 2: Platform Tools

  • ☐ Set up Google Inactive Account Manager
  • ☐ Set up Apple Legacy Contact
  • ☐ Set up Facebook Legacy Contact
  • ☐ Configure password manager emergency access
  • ☐ Print backup codes
  • ☐ Document hardware key locations

Week 3: Documentation

  • ☐ Create Digital Asset Memo
  • ☐ Organize by category
  • ☐ Include all access information
  • ☐ Add specific instructions
  • ☐ Store securely

Week 4: Legal Documents

  • ☐ Consult estate planning attorney
  • ☐ Update will with digital asset clause
  • ☐ Consider digital asset trust
  • ☐ Appoint digital executor
  • ☐ Ensure RUFADAA compliance

Ongoing:

  • ☐ Review quarterly
  • ☐ Update when accounts added/closed
  • ☐ Update after password changes
  • ☐ Update after life changes
  • ☐ Test executor’s access annually

Conclusion

Digital assets now represent significant financial and sentimental value. Proper estate planning ensures these assets pass to heirs without legal battles, expensive court proceedings, or permanent loss.

The problem without planning: – Family locked out of accounts – Cryptocurrency lost forever – Online businesses fail – Photos deleted – Legal fees $5,000-$15,000 – 6-18 months of delays

The solution: ✓ Include digital asset clause in will ✓ Create separate Digital Asset Memo (not in public will) ✓ Appoint digital executor ✓ Set up platform legacy tools (Google, Apple, Facebook) ✓ Use password manager with emergency access ✓ Document everything (inventory, credentials, 2FA) ✓ Update regularly

Most important: Take action now. Digital assets don’t pass like traditional property. Without planning, they’re lost.

Talk to your estate planning attorney about including digital assets in your will today.


Resources

Sources

By Pixels & Probate

Pixels & Probate covers the full spectrum of digital estate planning and administration — from recovering a deceased loved one's accounts to proactively organizing your own digital life. Founded from personal experience navigating a parent's digital estate in 2025.

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