We live much of our lives online, yet most standard estate plans are still shouting from the Stone Age. While families fight over grandma’s china, they often forget the cloud storage full of family photos or the Bitcoin wallet sitting on a hard drive. Here in Silicon Valley, where tech is king, ignoring your digital footprint is a massive risk.
Estate planning for digital assets has gone from a luxury to a necessity. Without a roadmap, your online life doesn’t automatically transfer to your heirs; it often disappears into the void.
Your digital legacy comprises every piece of electronic property and data you own, from sentimental emails to revenue-generating blogs. In California, the default legal stance is essentially that your digital life dies with you unless you have specifically designated someone to manage it.
This creates a massive headache for families. We aren’t talking about tangible boxes in a garage; we are talking about encrypted holdings and data rights. Posthumous management of these assets allows your loved ones to retrieve memories or value, but without legal authorization, they hit a brick wall. The servers that hold your data prioritize privacy considerations over your family’s grief, meaning your legacy stays locked away forever without the right paperwork.
Most people forget that assets without a physical form can still carry significant monetary or sentimental value. You might remember the obvious stuff, but asset inventorying needs to go deeper than bank accounts.
Commonly overlooked items include:
These assets often suffer from beneficiary designation gaps because generic wills rarely mention them specifically.
California does not require you to divide your estate equally among your children. You have the right to distribute your assets however you choose, but if you don’t communicate those choices, your heirs are left to fill in the blanks.
Sometimes, “equal” means a 50/50 split between two children. But what if one child was your primary caregiver? What if you already gave significant financial support to one child during your lifetime?
These are common reasons clients choose an unequal but fair distribution. The key is to explain your reasoning, either in writing or through a calm conversation, while you’re still here to answer questions.
If you’re planning to leave more to one child or exclude someone altogether, it’s smart to:
A clear explanation can’t guarantee that everyone will like your decisions, but it can make them easier to understand and accept.
Unless you take action now, your profiles will likely sit in limbo until the platform deletes them due to inactivity. How to handle social media accounts after death is largely governed by the specific platform policies of tech giants like Meta or X (formerly Twitter).
We see digital assets lost or misused frequently because families simply can’t get in to shut them down. However, some platforms are evolving. Facebook, for example, offers a “Legacy Contact” feature. This allows you to appoint a third party to manage specific aspects of your account (like pinning a final post or updating a profile picture) without giving them full login rights. Configuring these settings is a critical step in California digital legacy planning that residents should take immediately.
Cryptocurrency is unique because if the private key is lost, the money is gone forever, regardless of what a court order says. Cryptocurrency inheritance planning requires a strategy that goes beyond a standard will, because putting private keys in a public probate document is a security disaster.
Crypto assets face valuation volatility, meaning timing is everything. If your heirs spend six months trying to find your cold storage device or seed phrase, the value could crash. You need a system for secure credential storage that gives your trustee the physical means to access the funds while keeping them safe while you are alive. Without the record location and the keys, no amount of litigation can force the blockchain to refund your money.
Accessing an account using someone else’s password—even if they are deceased and you are the spouse—can technically violate Computer Fraud and Abuse laws and user service agreements. This puts families in a terrible position: they often need to act like a hacker to get what is rightfully theirs.
We saw this messy reality firsthand at the Ferguson Law Group. We handled a case involving a husband and wife, both chemical engineers, who owned a business together. The husband passed away, and the critical intellectual property (essential for the business’s survival) was locked on his computer. The wife didn’t have the password. Despite owning the business, Apple wouldn’t help her bypass the security on the computer. It became a frantic situation where we eventually had to bring in a white-hat hacker to break into the device to retrieve the IP.
That stress and expense could have been avoided with proper estate plan documents.
Generally, the answer is no; a standard power of attorney or executorship does not automatically bypass authorization protocols set by service providers. Fiduciary access to digital assets is strictly limited by the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA), which California has adopted.
Under this law, the fiduciary authority scope is determined by your specific consent. If you don’t explicitly grant your executor the right to access the content of your electronic communications (emails, texts), they may only get access to a “catalogue” of communications (the who and when), but not the “what.” They can’t just log in and start reading unless you’ve laid the legal groundwork.
You need a separate digital directive or a specifically drafted power of attorney that grants custodial control to a trusted person. Managing digital assets in a trust is often the smartest route, as it keeps the information private and out of probate court.
Your plan should include:
This ensures succession logistics are handled smoothly, rather than leaving your heirs guessing.
You should revisit and update your documents whenever you open a significant new account, adopt new technology, or change how and where your data is stored. Digital property and access rights evolve constantly, and your estate plan needs to keep pace.
If you are a content creator, a business owner with digital records, or a crypto investor, your current estate plan might have a massive hole in it. At Ferguson Law Group, we are unafraid of messy cases, but we prefer to help you avoid the mess altogether. Reach out to us today to ensure your digital life is just as protected as your physical one.
Most platforms have their own rules for memorializing, deleting, or transferring accounts, and without clear instructions, access can be delayed or denied to family members.
Yes. Cryptocurrency is inheritable property, but heirs can permanently lose access if private keys or recovery information are not properly documented.
Not always. Many estate plans require specific language and authorizations to give fiduciaries legal access to digital accounts and online property.