What Is Digital Legacy Planning?

Bekyn Life
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Digital legacy planning is the process of organizing and documenting your digital life so that the people you trust can access, manage, or close your accounts and digital assets if you’re unable to.

Why Digital Legacy Planning Matters

The average person has over 100 online accounts. Email, social media, banking, subscriptions, cloud storage, cryptocurrency — every one of these becomes a problem for your family if they don’t know it exists or can’t access it.

Without a plan, your family faces:

  • Lost assets — Forgotten retirement accounts, unclaimed crypto wallets, unused gift card balances
  • Identity theft risk — Unmonitored accounts become targets
  • Emotional burden — Grieving family members forced to detective their way through your digital life
  • Permanent loss — Photos, messages, and memories trapped in accounts no one can access

What a Digital Legacy Plan Includes

A complete digital legacy plan covers:

1. Account Inventory

A list of every online account you have, organized by category: financial, social, email, subscriptions, utilities, medical portals, and more.

2. Access Instructions

For each account: how to log in, whether two-factor authentication is enabled, where recovery codes are stored, and what should happen to the account.

3. Sunset Instructions

What you want done with each account — transfer ownership, download and archive, memorialize, or delete.

4. Trusted Contacts

Who should receive access, when, and to which categories of information. Not everyone needs to see everything.

5. Regular Reviews

A plan is only useful if it’s current. Digital lives change constantly — new accounts, changed passwords, closed services.

How to Get Started

You don’t need to do everything at once. Start with the highest-impact items:

  1. List your financial accounts — Banks, investments, retirement, insurance. These have real monetary value.
  2. Document your email accounts — Email is the skeleton key to most of your digital life (password resets flow through it).
  3. Choose a secure storage method — A purpose-built platform like Bekyn Life, a password manager with emergency access, or at minimum an encrypted document.
  4. Name at least one trusted person — Someone who knows the plan exists and how to access it.

Digital legacy planning isn’t morbid — it’s responsible. It’s the digital equivalent of having a will, and it’s something everyone with an online presence should do.