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Legacy

Organize your own digital life so a trusted person could manage things if you ever couldn't — a gift to the people you love.

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A map, not a vault

You record where things are and what you'd want done — not actual passwords. Keep secrets in a proper password manager.

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Peace of mind

Name your trusted people, list your important accounts, and leave clear wishes. Then print it for your records.

Digital Estate

Legacy

Organize your digital life for the people you trust

Read this first

How this works — safely

This planner is a map, not a vault. It helps a trusted person find and handle your digital life. It does not store passwords.

Never type actual passwords here.Record only where to find them — for example "in my password manager" or "in the sealed envelope in the safe." Keep real passwords in a dedicated password manager, and tell your trusted person how to reach the master key through your lawyer or a sealed document.
The plan

Four simple steps

1
Name your trusted people
Who should handle this, and how to reach them.
2
List your important accounts
Email, banking, subscriptions, social — and where the keys live.
3
Write your wishes
What you'd want done with each — memorialize, close, transfer.
4
Print and store it safely
With your will or in a safe. Tell your trusted person where it is.

Trusted people

The person or people who'd carry out your wishes. Often the same as an executor.

Add a trusted person

Important accounts

List the accounts that matter. Remember: where the key is, never the key itself.

Add an account

Reminder: if you're about to type a real password, stop — put "see password manager" instead.

Your wishes

What you'd like done, in your own words. Clear guidance spares your loved ones hard guesses.

Consider talking to a lawyer about making your digital wishes part of your formal estate plan — laws about account access after death vary, and an executor with legal standing can act far more easily.

Print your plan

A clean summary for your records. Store it with your will or in a safe — and tell your trusted person where it is.

Backup & restore

Handle both the printout and backup file carefully.They map your digital life. Store them somewhere secure and share only with the people you truly trust.