Your digital legacy
What happens to your online life when you die?
Most of us live online. Banking, savings, pensions, subscriptions, social media, photos, email - none of it appears in a traditional will. The Trusted Hands Digital Legacy Vault gives your executors a clear, controlled record of what exists and what to do about it.
The problem with a paper-only estate
A solicitor-drafted will lists property, money and possessions. It doesn't tell anyone:
- Which bank holds your current account
- That you have a pension with a provider you haven't touched in 12 years
- Which subscriptions are quietly draining the estate after death
- That your photos from the last decade live on one cloud account no-one else can log into
- That a small but meaningful crypto wallet exists at all
Unclaimed UK assets sit in the hundreds of millions of pounds because executors simply don't know what to look for.
What you can record
- Account lists - bank, building society, pension, investment, insurance providers (don't share passwords - just which providers; the executor contacts them with the death certificate)
- Subscriptions to cancel - streaming, software, gyms, charities
- Cloud storage and photos - so a lifetime of pictures isn't lost to a forgotten login
- Social media wishes - memorialise, delete, hand over
- Letters of wishes - personal notes that don't belong in the will itself
How access works after death
Nothing in your vault is shared until you choose to share it, or until your executor portal is unlocked by Trusted Hands after a death is confirmed. You stay in control while you're alive; your family gets clarity when they need it.
The Digital Legacy Vault is the Family Vault by another name - same encrypted storage, same executor-sharing - included with the Annual Subscription with Family Vault.
Don't leave your digital life to chance.
Build your will, then organise your digital legacy in one place your executors can actually reach.