Digital Assets Are Becoming the Most Overlooked Part of a Modern Estate
Online investment platforms, crypto holdings and cloud-based records often hold meaningful value, yet many estates struggle because no one can legally or practically access them.
Estate planning used to focus on property deeds, bank accounts and share certificates stored in a filing cabinet.
That world has changed quietly.
A growing proportion of personal wealth now exists behind passwords. Investment portfolios sit on online platforms. Rental property records are stored in cloud systems. Business owners keep contracts, client data and intellectual property inside subscription software. Some investors hold cryptocurrency with no paper trail at all.
The legal ownership may be clear.
Access is often not.
Executors regularly discover that an estate includes assets they know exist but cannot retrieve quickly. The deceased may have used two-factor authentication linked to a personal phone, encrypted password vaults, or online platforms with strict privacy rules. This often means valuable accounts remain frozen while the estate incurs delay, professional fees and frustration.
For a high-value estate, the issue is rarely sentimental.
It is operational.
A business owner may have supplier agreements, digital invoicing systems and recurring revenue channels that only they managed. If nobody else knows where the systems are or how they are structured, income can stop almost immediately. Property investors can face the same problem when tenancy records, mortgage statements and insurance documents are scattered across online portals.
The result is not always a loss of wealth.
Sometimes it is a loss of control.
Families can spend months identifying accounts that should have been documented in a single afternoon. During that period, tax deadlines do not pause. Probate applications still move forward. HMRC still expects accurate reporting. In practice, digital disorganisation can make a well-built estate feel chaotic.
The challenge is compounded by legal uncertainty.
Some platforms treat access rights differently from ownership rights. An executor may have authority under a will, yet the provider’s terms can still restrict direct access. Without a clear inventory and legally drafted guidance, unnecessary administration becomes almost inevitable.
Many sophisticated estates still ignore this because digital assets feel intangible. People protect the visible wealth – property, companies and investment portfolios – while neglecting the systems that control them.
A stronger approach treats digital access as part of the estate itself.
That means creating a secure asset register, recording account locations, identifying subscription services and documenting who should have authority. For business owners, it may also involve assigning operational access during lifetime rather than leaving everything dependent on one person.
The objective is not to hand over private information casually.
It is to prevent a valuable estate from becoming inaccessible at the moment clarity matters most.
As wealth becomes increasingly digital, the question is no longer whether these assets belong in an estate plan.
The question is whether the estate can function without them.