877-311-7149

INFO@ARLAWGRP.COM

  • Home
  • About
  • Practice areas
    • Real Estate
    • Wills, Trusts & Estates
    • PERSONAL INJURY
    • CORPORATE AND BUSINESS
    • OTHER AREAS OF PRACTICE
  • Estate Planning
  • Attorneys
    • JEFFREY R. AIBARA
    • BLAKE W. REED
    • Sharmila G. Narain
  • Resources
    • Privacy Policy
    • FAQ
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Practice areas
    • Real Estate
    • Wills, Trusts & Estates
    • PERSONAL INJURY
    • CORPORATE AND BUSINESS
    • OTHER AREAS OF PRACTICE
  • Estate Planning
  • Attorneys
    • JEFFREY R. AIBARA
    • BLAKE W. REED
    • Sharmila G. Narain
  • Resources
    • Privacy Policy
    • FAQ
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact
How Your Digital Life Becomes a Legal Nightmare Without a Plan

When most people think about estate planning, they picture the traditional things like your home, bank accounts, retirement plans, sentimental keepsakes, maybe even the family cabin. But there’s an entire category of your life that is often overlooked:

Read more: How Your Digital Life Becomes a Legal Nightmare Without a Plan

Your digital life.

In a world where almost everything we do is online, your digital presence has become one of your most valuable (and complicated) assets. And without proper planning, your loved ones might not be able to access anything when you are gone.

What Counts as a “Digital Asset”? 

Digital assets include far more than passwords and social media.

They can include:

  • Online bank or investment accounts
  • Cryptocurrency and digital wallets
  • Photos and videos stored in the cloud
  • Email accounts
  • PayPal, Venmo, or CashApp balances
  • Online businesses
  • Loyalty points and airline miles
  • Social media accounts
  • Online subscriptions
  • Stored documents in Google Drive, Dropbox, or iCloud

Basically—anything that lives behind a username and password.

The Legal Problem: Your Loved Ones Can’t Just Log In

Here’s what surprises most people:

It’s illegal for anyone—even your spouse—to use your password after you die.

Federal privacy laws and terms of service agreements prohibit unauthorized access. That means your family may not be able to:

  • Recover family photos
  • Access important documents
  • Shut down accounts
  • Transfer digital currency
  • Close or memorialize social media profiles
  • Retrieve business information

In some cases, companies like Apple and Google have denied access even when families had a court order.

How Estate Planning Solves the Digital Mess

A modern estate plan includes specific documents addressing digital assets, such as:

1. Digital Asset Authorization

This gives your trusted person permission to access your accounts.

2. A Secure Inventory

A list of accounts, devices, and instructions stored safely

3. Instructions for Each Category

What to save, delete, transfer, or protect.

4. A Backup Plan

Because technology, and access, changes constantly.

Why This Matters More Than Ever

Your digital life tells your story. It contains your memories, your communications, your work, and in many cases, your money. Without direction, it can vanish forever – or get locked behind a wall your family can’t break through.

We Can Help!

Ready to get a plan that includes your digital assets? Start by booking a LEGACY PLANNING SESSION! We’ll answer your questions, go over your options and our flat fees, and decide if we want to move forward. Mention this blog and we’ll waive the $550 session fee!

Subscribe

* indicates required
/* real people should not fill this in and expect good things - do not remove this or risk form bot signups */

Intuit Mailchimp

EVENTS

21 Nov,2024

Aibara Reed Law Group presents ESTATE PLANNING IN UNCERTAIN TIMES

03 Aug,2017

2nd Annual Karp Family Fundraiser

02 Jun,2017

What Does An Executor of a Will Actually Do?

05 May,2017

Why LegalZoom (and “Doing It By Yourself”) Might Not Be The Best Option

877-311-7149
info@arlawgrp.com

© 2015 Aibara Reed Law Group. All Rights Reserved.

SEO by: Benjamin Marc

40 West Main Street, Suite 202 | Mount Kisco, NY 10549 | 914.458.4020
514 Larkfield Road, Suite #1, East Northport, NY 11731, USA | 631.306.4922

  • ATTORNEY ADVERTISING
  • disclaimer
  • Blog