Most people think of estate planning as organizing financial accounts, legal documents, and property. But an increasingly important part of your legacy now lives in a different place—your digital world. Photos, messages, emails, files, and online accounts hold memories and information your family may want or need someday. Setting up a plan for who can access these digital items is becoming just as important as planning for your physical and financial assets. Digital legacy planning is a simple step that helps your loved ones.
Why Your Digital Life Matters in Estate Planning
Your phone, computer, and online accounts contain pieces of your life that may be meaningful or helpful to the people you care about. These can include:
- Photos and videos
- Messages and emails
- Notes, documents, and personal files
- Cloud storage accounts
- Social media profiles
- Online subscriptions and memberships
Without a plan, your loved ones may face significant challenges accessing these items. Many companies have strict privacy protections that prevent anyone—even family—from entering an account without prior authorization. Digital legacy tools help bridge that gap.
What Digital Legacy Tools Do
Many major technology companies now offer ways for you to choose someone who can access certain parts of your account if you pass away or become inactive. While each company handles this differently, the general idea is the same: you select a trusted person, and they receive limited, secure access to your data when it’s needed.
These tools typically allow access to personal content such as photos, messages, or files, while keeping sensitive information—like passwords, payment details, or private security data—protected.
How This Helps Your Loved Ones
Setting up digital legacy access is a thoughtful step that can make a difficult time easier for your family. It can:
- Reduce stress by giving loved ones a clear path to important information
- Preserve meaningful memories stored on your devices or in the cloud
- Help executors locate documents or records that support estate settlement
- Prevent accounts from becoming permanently locked or deleted
- Ensure your digital presence is handled according to your wishes
It’s a small action that can have a big impact.
How to Take Action Today
Many technology companies offer their own digital-legacy tools. Some of the key ones are:
- Apple allows you to assign a Legacy Contact to access your iCloud data
- Google offers an inactive account manager option to set a timeout period and make choices on what happens with Gmail, Google Drive, pictures, YouTube, and other data
- Go to myaccount.google.com/inactive or navigate via Settings > Data & Privacy > Make a plan for your digital legacy
- Meta/Facebook allows you to assign a legacy contact to memorialize your profile or deletion
If you are using a password manager, you may also be able to designate legacy contacts who can access your information after certain security protocols occur. This can be especially helpful to loved ones to see all of the accounts or subscriptions they may need to address.
Beyond this list, we would encourage you to research how to set up a legacy contact for each of the major platforms you use.
A Simple Addition to Your Overall Plan
Digital legacy planning doesn’t replace traditional estate planning—it complements it. Just as you update beneficiaries or organize important documents, choosing who can access your digital information is another way to make sure your affairs are handled smoothly.
Most digital legacy tools take only a few minutes to set up. You can usually choose more than one trusted person, and you can update your choices at any time. It’s also helpful to keep any access keys or instructions with your estate documents so everything is in one place.
If you’d like to strategize about your digital estate planning, our financial planners are happy to serve as thinking partners for a thoughtful discussion. You can reach us through the Contact Us page.