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Common Mistakes

Common Mistake #17: Skipping a Digital Estate Plan (And Leaving Loved Ones Locked Out)

By
Alexander Harmsen
Alexander Harmsen is the Co-founder and CEO of PortfolioPilot. With a track record of building AI-driven products that have scaled globally, he brings deep expertise in finance, technology, and strategy to create content that is both data-driven and actionable.
Reviewed by
PortfolioPilot Compliance Team
The PortfolioPilot Compliance Team reviews all content for factual accuracy and adherence to SEC marketing rules, ensuring every piece meets the highest standards of transparency and compliance.

Much of modern life now exists online. Financial accounts, personal photos, professional records, subscriptions, social media profiles, and even entire investment portfolios may be accessible only through digital credentials. Yet many estate plans focus exclusively on physical and financial assets, leaving digital access unaddressed.

This article explains why neglecting a digital estate plan is a growing but often overlooked mistake, how digital assets differ from traditional ones, and why failing to plan for access can create confusion and loss even when other estate documents are in place.

Key takeaways

  • Digital assets often require credentials, not just legal authority.
  • Many online platforms restrict access without explicit instructions.
  • Digital assets can hold financial, personal, or operational value.
  • Lack of access can lead to permanent loss, not just inconvenience.
  • A digital estate plan provides clarity without requiring constant updates.

Why digital assets are easy to overlook

Digital assets tend to feel informal. Photos live in the cloud. Messages sit in email accounts. Subscriptions renew automatically. Even cryptocurrency holdings may exist only as private keys stored digitally.

Because these assets do not arrive in paper statements or physical files, they are easy to exclude from traditional planning. Many people assume that passwords can be recovered, accounts can be accessed later, or service providers will cooperate with heirs.

At first glance, this assumption feels reasonable. The assets exist, so access feels implied.

Where the structure breaks down

Digital assets are governed by access rules, not just ownership rules.

Many online platforms prohibit sharing login credentials and will not grant access based solely on a will or court order. Without proper authorization or instructions, providers may limit heirs to memorializing accounts or deny access altogether.

This is where the logic breaks. Legal authority does not automatically translate into technical access. Without credentials or explicit digital instructions, control over digital assets can be effectively lost.

In some cases, the barrier is not legal - it is cryptographic.

Binary classification chart

Asset type Recovery possible without access?
Email/cloud Sometimes
Social media Limited
Subscriptions No
Online businesses Rarely
Cryptocurrency ❌ No

Some digital assets allow limited recovery. Others do not.

How locked accounts create irreversible loss

When digital access is missing, the impact can extend beyond inconvenience.

Personal photos, creative work, or important correspondence may be unrecoverable. Subscription services may continue billing. Business operations tied to email or online platforms may stall. Cryptocurrency or other digital assets secured by private keys may become permanently inaccessible.

Because these systems are designed to prioritize security, there is often no recovery path. Once access is lost, the asset may effectively disappear.

The consequence is not delay-it is forfeiture.

Why this risk often goes unnoticed

Digital assets rarely affect daily estate planning conversations. They do not appear on balance sheets in obvious ways, and their value, financial or sentimental, is often underestimated.

There is also a false sense of redundancy. Cloud storage, password recovery tools, and customer support can feel like safeguards. In reality, they are designed for living users, not estates.

As long as the account holder is active, the gap remains invisible.

A more durable way to think about digital assets

Individuals who address this issue tend to adopt a simple framing:

Digital assets require both legal authority and practical access.

A digital estate plan does not require listing every password in a document. It involves identifying what digital assets exist, how access is controlled, and who should manage or receive them.

The goal is continuity, not intrusion. Clear instructions allow loved ones to act without guessing or breaching platform rules.

When informal digital arrangements may still exist

Some people rely on shared devices, password managers, or ongoing conversations to convey digital access. In simple situations, this can work.

The distinction lies in durability.

Informal access can fail when credentials change, devices are lost, or security protocols tighten. A digital estate plan does not eliminate flexibility-it provides a fallback when informal systems break.

Digital assets work best when access is intentional, not assumed.

Digital Assets & Estate Planning — FAQs

What counts as a digital asset?
Examples include email accounts, cloud storage, social media profiles, subscription services, online businesses, and digital currencies.
Can a will alone grant access to digital accounts?
Often no. Many platforms require specific authorization or credentials beyond what a will provides.
Why is cryptocurrency especially vulnerable?
Access typically depends on private keys. If those keys are lost, the assets may be unrecoverable.
Is sharing passwords in a will recommended?
Many people avoid listing passwords directly in estate documents and instead use separate, secure methods referenced by the plan.
How often should a digital estate plan be reviewed?
Some people revisit it when major accounts change or when overall estate plans are updated.
How can a lack of digital access affect business operations?
Businesses tied to email, domains, or online platforms may stall or fail if heirs cannot access key systems.
Why do digital assets rarely appear in traditional estate plans?
They lack physical statements and are often underestimated in value, making them easy to exclude.
Can subscription services create ongoing financial issues?
Yes. Without access, subscriptions may continue billing indefinitely, creating avoidable costs.
Why does legal authority not equal practical control online?
Digital systems enforce technical barriers that courts and documents cannot bypass.

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1: As of November 14, 2025