Estate Planning Blog Articles

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What Happens to Digital Assets when You Die?

Remember the phrase “Swedish death cleaning?” This trend was based on decluttering your life while you’re living so you don’t leave a disaster for loved ones when you pass. Digital death cleaning may be even more critical than decluttering because you can’t clean out what you can’t find.

A recent article from The Wall Street Journal, “Why Everyone Needs a ‘Digital Death-Cleaning’ Plan,” offers a way to get organized so digital assets aren’t lost or used for identity theft and even worse cybercrimes.

Create categories and label files. A file with deeply personal materials might be labeled “DoD—Delete Upon Death,” while a file containing information about finances could be labeled “Relevant.” The goal is to let survivors know if they will need the files.

DoD files are stuff you don’t want anyone to read after you’ve passed. Years of complaints about your ex-spouse or the difficulties in raising children might be better-left unread. Another idea is to put these kinds of files on a hard drive somewhere and label them, so they can be destroyed as per the instructions in your will. Don’t count on encryption to protect files. Just as any password can be hacked, any file can be opened.

Relevant files include information about your estate, finances and account passwords. If you keep instructions about heating or air conditioning systems on the computer, they may be needed to keep things running—for example, if your oil burner is cranky and needs extra TLC at the start of every heating season.

You’ll probably have files to label “Memorabilia.” These may be photos, videos, or anything you think children or grandchildren would like to read in the distant future to learn about you, your family history and the world you lived in.

All your organizing will work best if you also leave a physical document with a list of digital assets, such as subscriptions, email addresses, utility login info, etc.

Talk with your estate planning attorney to determine how your state addresses digital assets in wills. Most states have adopted a uniform law concerning digital assets, so you’ll want the estate plan to follow these rules.

Finally, consider digitizing your life. If you have a collection of photos, articles you’ve published, or ephemera, all of it can fit into a shoebox if it’s been digitized and stored on thumb drives. You’ll be able to enjoy it as an online memory book now, and your children won’t be stuck clawing through an endless series of boxes later. If you’re a true packrat, chances are your children know it and will appreciate your efforts to lighten their lives after you’ve passed.

Doing your digital cleaning is also the time to review your estate plan, especially if it’s been a few years since it was reviewed. If you don’t have an estate plan, now is the time to meet with an experienced estate planning attorney to create a will, plan for incapacity with a Power of Attorney and Health Care Power of Attorney and related documents depending upon your unique situation.

Reference: The Wall Street Journal (Aug. 6, 2024) “Why Everyone Needs a ‘Digital Death-Cleaning’ Plan”

Your Cryptocurrency and NFTs Need to Be Included in Your Estate Plan

As more people continue to purchase cryptocurrencies and non-fungible tokens (NFTs), digital assets are becoming a bigger part of the investment world and of people’s estate plans. If you want to pass these assets to loved ones upon death, you’ll need to plan for it, says the article “Got Cryptocurrency or NFTs? They Need to Be in Your Estate Planfrom Kiplinger. Otherwise, securing, transferring and gifting crypto and NFTs can create unsolvable problems and lost assets.

There are many different kinds of crypto and NFTs, with Bitcoin, Ethereum, Binance Coin, Thether among them. An NFT is a unique, collectable, and tradable digital asset, like digital art or a photo. NFTs are purchased through a bidding process in this universe and in the metaverse, an online world where people are buying homes, real estate and more in the shape of NFTs. Sales of NFTs are estimated to have reached more than $17 billion in 2021. For better or worse, the future is here.

Cryptocurrency is accessed through a private key. This is a series of alphanumeric characters known only to the owner and stored in cold storage or a digital wallet. Whoever has possession of the key can buy, sell and spend the digital currency. If you have crypto, your family or fiduciary needs to know what you have, where to find the assets and what to do with them.

One option is to share the private key or place crypto assets and NFTs in custody, using a software application or a hardware wallet. There are a number of companies now offering these services. An old-school option for this new world asset is to create a secure spreadsheet of your digital assets and list the login protocols for each account.

For now, it is difficult to open crypto accounts and NFTs in the name of a revocable or irrevocable trust. However, digital wallets allowing you to open an account in the name of a trust do exist, if the company handling the digital asset permits. This is a very new, rapidly evolving asset class. Beneficiaries may not yet be named for crypto accounts. However, this may change in the future.

With no trust account and no named beneficiary, what happens to your crypto and NFTs when you die? For now, they must pass through your probate estate under the will. Your estate planning attorney will make sure your estate plan includes the correct way to give digital asset powers for the fiduciary handling your estate and include digital asset powers in your will, trust, and durable power of attorney.

If your state has adopted the Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (UFADAA) or the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA)—46 states have—then it will be easier for loved ones to manage digital assets in case of incapacity or when you pass, as long as your estate plan addresses them.

Reference: Kiplinger (May 23, 2022) “Got Cryptocurrency or NFTs? They Need to Be in Your Estate Plan

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