Today, many assets that once existed in material form now live online. Photos, financial accounts, business operations, and even personal identities are stored across devices, platforms, and cloud services. Without clear planning and authority, a client’s digital assets can be difficult or impossible for fiduciaries or heirs to access, creating gaps in an otherwise well-structured estate plan.
Clients no longer distinguish between assets they can physically touch and those that exist only online. A person cannot hold cryptocurrency in their hand, but they can transfer significant value instantly from a mobile wallet. They may never step into their e-commerce business, but it can still generate substantial income that flows directly into their digital accounts.
Digital assets are every bit as real and valuable as traditional property—sometimes even more so. Yet clients do not always treat them that way in their estate plan. They account for their home and heirlooms, but what about their Venmo balance, web domains, and crypto wallets?
Think about how many digital assets a typical client interacts with daily. Their smartphone is filled with years’ worth of photos, messages, authentication codes, and logins. They go online to check banking and investment apps, pay bills, move money through PayPal or Venmo, and access cloud storage, subscriptions, rewards programs, and digital wallets. By day’s end, they have used dozens of digital accounts, some holding real monetary value, others containing irreplaceable personal history. Yet most clients do not recognize these items as part of their overall estate.
A recent Bryn Mawr Trust survey found that Americans now place an average value of nearly $200,000 on their digital assets, and 79 percent say protecting those assets is important—almost identical to the 78 percent who feel that way about traditional financial assets. However, only 44 percent of those working with attorneys say digital assets and digital estate planning have ever been raised.
People also underestimate the size of their digital footprint. In the same survey, respondents reported having from a handful to about 250 digital accounts, and many could not even estimate the number of files they have.
Perhaps most telling for planners are these responses:
The message is clear: Clients constantly interact with digital assets but often have no idea what those assets are, let alone how to protect them.
So, what counts as a digital asset today? That may be less clear.
Clients may mistakenly believe that digital assets begin and end with Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies; in reality, digital assets include any electronically stored piece of information a person owns, uses, controls, or derives value from, along with the accounts, platforms, and devices that store that information. They generally fall into several categories:
Most clients are unaware of how much of their lives run through digital channels until someone asks them to think about it. One effective way to start the conversation is to have clients describe a typical day and identify each digital touchpoint. Then expand the exercise: What do they access weekly? What bills are auto-drafted monthly? Which platforms hold financial data, business information, or personal memories?
Writing down these touchpoints transforms abstract digital assets into a concrete inventory. Viewed over a day, a week, or a month, this exercise reveals accounts and information that should be documented, secured, and incorporated into an estate plan. It turns an overwhelming concept into a clear map of a client’s digital estate and lays the groundwork for attorney-guided planning.
Even when clients understand what digital assets are, many unintentionally leave them out of their estate plan. Advisors can watch for common risks and match each one with a simple planning step.
Risk: Business disruption for owners and entrepreneurs
We are living in a digital world. Advisors and clients cannot overlook digital estate planning, and an estate plan that fails to address digital assets is incomplete and out of date. Contact the attorneys at Altman & Associates should you wish to discuss your digital planning at (301) 468-3220 or at altmanassociates.net.
Contributed by Andrew White
