
Protecting Your Digital Legacy:
A Modern Approach to Estate Planning
Our lives are more digital than ever. From bank statements and tax records to family photos and social media profiles, much of what defines our lives now lives online. Yet few people think about what happens to those accounts when they’re gone. Loved ones are often left guessing how to access what matters most—or worse, locked out entirely. Estate planning has always been about protecting what you value. Today, that includes your digital life.
Why Your Digital Life Matters in Estate Planning
Think about everything you manage online: your photos, messages, cloud storage, streaming subscriptions, digital wallets, and even the apps that pay your bills. These are all part of your “digital estate.” When someone passes away, families often face more digital hurdles than physical ones. Privacy laws and platform terms of service are designed to protect users while they’re alive, but those same safeguards can make it nearly impossible for family members to gain access later. Without planning, important memories, business records, and even money stored in online accounts can be lost forever.
Digital planning isn’t about convenience. It’s about clarity, access, and protection.
What Really Happens When Someone Dies
Every platform handles accounts differently. Some allow you to appoint a legacy contact in advance. Others delete or lock accounts automatically. Here’s what you need to know about the most common platforms.
Google (Gmail, Drive, YouTube, Photos)
Google lets you decide what happens through the Inactive Account Manager. You can choose how long of inactivity triggers the plan, who should be notified, and what data they can access. You can even tell Google to delete your account entirely after that point. If you don’t set this up, your family can still submit a request, but they won’t automatically receive your emails, files, or photos without a court order.
Learn more: https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/3036546?hl=en
Apple (iCloud, iMessage, Photos, Apple ID)
Apple’s Legacy Contact feature allows you to designate trusted people who can request access to your iCloud data after your death. They’ll need the access key Apple provides and a copy of your death certificate. Without that setup, Apple won’t grant anyone access, even to photos or notes.
Set up now: On your iPhone or iPad, go to Settings → [Your Name] → Sign-In & Security → Legacy Contact.
Meta (Facebook and Instagram)
Meta lets you choose whether your Facebook account is memorialized or deleted; Instagram memorialization requests must be made by family or representatives.
You can also name a Legacy Contact who can manage limited parts of your memorialized profile—updating your photo, posting a message, or responding to friend requests.
Set up now: Facebook Settings → Memorialization Settings.
Microsoft (Outlook, OneDrive, Office)
Microsoft may close accounts after about a year of inactivity and typically deletes them after two years if unused.
If an authorized family member contacts them, they may provide account contents before closing, but there’s no guaranteed right of access without documentation.
Plan ahead: Store important Microsoft documents in shared folders or ensure your executor knows what accounts exist.
LinkedIn will either memorialize or close an account after receiving proof of death. Memorialized profiles display a note acknowledging the person’s passing, while closed profiles are removed entirely.
Plan ahead: Include your professional accounts in your digital inventory so your executor can decide which should remain visible.
X (Twitter)
X doesn’t allow anyone to access your account after death. However, a verified family member or authorized representative can request that your account be deactivated or removed from public view.
Plan ahead: If you want your account deleted, note that in your digital instructions.
Amazon
Amazon doesn’t allow account transfers. Family or executors can contact customer support with proof of death to close the account. Digital purchases—like Kindle books or movies—are licensed, not owned, so they can’t be inherited. For sellers, the executor must contact Amazon’s Seller Support team with documentation.
Plan ahead: Keep login details for any business or seller accounts, and note recurring subscriptions tied to your Amazon account.
Netflix
Netflix accounts can be canceled by contacting customer service with proof of death, even without a password, if you can provide identifying information.
Plan ahead: Keep a list of subscriptions to avoid unwanted charges after death.
PayPal, Venmo, and Cash App
PayPal allows executors to close an account by providing a death certificate and proof of authority. Any remaining funds are released to the estate. Venmo and Cash App have similar processes but require formal requests.
Plan ahead: Include all digital wallets and payment platforms in your estate plan, especially if funds are stored there or tied to recurring payments.
TikTok
TikTok doesn’t currently offer a memorialization or legacy feature, and its policies don’t allow anyone to take over or manage an account after death. Family members or executors can request that an account be deleted, but they generally can’t recover videos or private messages.
Plan ahead: If you or a loved one uses TikTok to share family memories or creative work, consider downloading those videos periodically or backing them up to another device or cloud storage service. For content with sentimental or business value, note where those files are stored and who should have access.
Cloud Storage and Photos
Services like Dropbox, Google Photos, and Shutterfly may provide access to family members with proper documentation, but it’s not guaranteed. Many families lose thousands of photos simply because they were stored online under a single login.
Plan ahead: Share access keys or include digital photo libraries in your legacy planning instructions.
The Hidden Digital Assets Families Forget
Not every online account is social or financial. Some digital assets carry personal or sentimental value that can’t be replaced:
- Family photo albums stored in iCloud or Google Photos
- Personal blogs, websites, or domain registrations
- Subscription services like Spotify, Hulu, or iCloud storage that keep charging after death
- Business platforms such as Etsy, Shopify, or QuickBooks
- Email archives that contain legal, financial, or sentimental records
Each of these deserves attention in your estate plan. The goal isn’t to share every password—it’s to ensure the right people know what exists and how to handle it.
The Tools You Can Set Up Right Now
A few settings can make a world of difference:
- Apple Legacy Contact – Add trusted contacts who can access your iCloud data when needed.
- Google Inactive Account Manager – Decide what happens after inactivity and who gets notified.
- Meta Memorialization Settings – Control how Facebook and Instagram handle your profiles.
- Password Managers – A reputable password manager can securely store your login credentials and may offer an emergency access feature that lets a trusted person access your accounts if something happens to you.
- Digital Inventory List – Keep a secure record of your accounts, instructions, and access keys.
Planning your digital legacy doesn’t have to be overwhelming. It just needs to be intentional. If you live in Alabama or Florida, our team can help you make sure your estate plan covers the online accounts and digital assets that matter most.
The Law Behind It: Alabama and Florida
Both Alabama and Florida have adopted the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA). This law gives executors, trustees, and agents the authority to manage digital assets—if you’ve given permission in your estate documents or through a platform’s own settings.
Here’s how it works:
- If you use a platform tool (like Apple Legacy Contact), that decision takes priority.
- If you don’t use a platform tool, your will, trust, or power of attorney can grant access.
- Without either, your executor may need a court order to access even basic online accounts.
By adding digital authorization to your legal documents, you can make sure your fiduciaries have both the right and the ability to act quickly when the time comes.
How Heircraft Planning Helps
At Heircraft Planning, every estate plan we create includes digital asset authorization so your fiduciaries can legally manage online accounts under Alabama or Florida law. For families who want an extra layer of organization and security, we also offer an optional secure digital vault add-on. It allows clients to store and update estate documents, passwords, and account details in one private, password-protected place. The vault can be accessed by your chosen fiduciaries when the time comes, keeping your information safe but within reach when needed.
Final Thought
Your life isn’t limited to paper files and property. It also lives in photos, messages, passwords, and memories. Protecting that legacy is one of the most meaningful gifts you can leave behind.
At Heircraft Planning, we help Alabama and Florida families create estate plans that cover every part of life—from what you own to what you store online.
Ready to make sure your digital life is protected? Contact Heircraft Planning to discuss how digital asset authorization and secure storage fit into your estate plan.
