Crypto inheritance is different
With crypto, the wrong instruction can permanently expose assets. The missing instruction can permanently lock them away.
That is why the goal is not to email a seed phrase to family.
The goal is to create a careful recovery map.
Do not casually share seed phrases
Avoid putting seed phrases, private keys, or recovery files in ordinary notes, email, text messages, or public legal documents.
Instead, document what exists and how a trusted person should begin the process.
What your family needs to know
At minimum, leave context for:
- which wallets or exchanges exist
- who should handle the crypto process
- where hardware wallets or recovery materials are stored
- whether professional help is needed
- what should not be moved without verification
Separate inventory from access
A useful plan can say that crypto exists without exposing the full recovery secret immediately.
For example:
- Collection: Crypto inventory
- Trusted contact: spouse or executor
- Instruction: where to find professional guidance and physical recovery materials
- Release rule: delayed access only when your safeguards are satisfied
Review it more often than other records
Crypto tools, wallets, and exchanges change quickly.
Review your instructions whenever you:
- change wallet providers
- move assets
- create new recovery materials
- change trusted contacts