Google's inactivity tool is valuable, but it covers one ecosystem
Inactive Account Manager is one of the best built-in platform tools for future account access.
It is still narrower than a full digital legacy plan.
Quick comparison
| Question | Google Inactive Account Manager | Digital Legacy Vault |
|---|---|---|
| What triggers it? | A period of inactivity that you set in advance. | A future handoff plan based on the records, contacts, and release rules you document. |
| Which accounts does it help with? | Google services only. | Google, Apple, banking, legal records, subscriptions, and other accounts you plan for. |
| Can it store documents and instructions? | No dedicated cross-platform vault for that purpose. | Yes, that is part of the planning use case. |
| Can you choose who gets what? | Google says you can choose up to 10 people and select data to share. | You decide which collections and records belong to which trusted people. |
| Does it replace estate planning? | No. | No, but it is built for the wider digital legacy problem. |
The best answer is often both
Use Google's tool for Google account inactivity.
Use a broader planning system for:
- passwords and recovery notes
- executor instructions
- non-Google accounts
- legal and household documents
Why this matters for real families
An executor rarely handles only one platform.
If Gmail is covered but banking, Apple, subscriptions, and final instructions are not, the family is still missing the wider map.