When digital assets are left out of an estate plan, families are left with no lawful way to access those accounts or recover digital property after a loved one’s death. A simple example highlights the risk: if you own cryptocurrency stored in a private wallet and no one has lawful access to the keys after your death, the asset is effectively gone forever.
Proper digital estate planning ensures these assets are identified, legally accessible, and transferred according to your wishes, rather than lost due to missing authority or outdated documents. At MCIS Law, we help Texas families address these risks by incorporating digital assets into comprehensive estate plans that provide clear authority, lawful access, and practical guidance for the future.
Under Texas law, a digital asset is any electronic record in which you have a right or interest. Common examples include:
Many people assume a standard will covers all their property. Digital assets, though, are different. Most digital assets are protected by passwords, encryption, and/or strict terms of service. Listing login credentials in a will is unsafe, and in many cases, still insufficient to grant legal access. Without proper authorization, service providers may refuse to release account contents, even to an executor. The result can be frustration, delay, and even the permanent loss of valuable property or information.
At MCIS Law, we routinely see estates stalled because executors lack the legal authority required to access online accounts. Addressing this issue during the planning stage avoids unnecessary probate complications later.
Texas has adopted the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA). This law governs when an executor, trustee, or agent can access digital assets after death or incapacity.
Under RUFADAA:
Without clear estate planning language, your executor’s authority may be severely limited. MCIS Law drafts estate planning documents that expressly comply with RUFADAA, ensuring fiduciaries have the authority Texas law requires to act on your behalf.
Cryptocurrency requires special attention. Unlike bank accounts, crypto is decentralized. There is no institution to call if access is lost.
Important considerations include:
The goal is to provide lawful access and guidance without putting the assets at risk during your lifetime or during the probate process. This balance requires careful drafting and secure planning tools. At MCIS Law, we help clients structure cryptocurrency planning in a way that protects assets while preserving privacy and security.
Effective digital estate planning often includes:
For many Texans, a trust offers better control and privacy than a will, especially for high-value digital property or online businesses. Unlike a will, which becomes part of the public probate record, a trust typically allows digital assets to be managed privately, outside of court oversight. A trust can also provide ongoing instructions for how digital assets are handled after death, which is particularly important for cryptocurrency, online businesses, and other assets where timing and confidentiality matter.
These are issues MCIS Law identifies and corrects during the planning process, before they turn into costly problems for surviving family members.
You should review your estate plan after major life or financial changes, and that review should always include a focused look at your digital assets. Events such as buying or selling cryptocurrency, launching or closing an online business, marriage, divorce, or the birth of a child often affect beneficiary designations, fiduciary authority, and asset ownership.
As part of your estate plan review, the digital portion of your plan should be updated to confirm that all digital assets are identified, access instructions remain accurate, fiduciaries still have proper authority, and any changes to platforms or Texas law are properly addressed.
Reviewing the digital components alongside the rest of your estate plan helps ensure nothing is overlooked as your assets and responsibilities evolve.
Read Also: Protecting Your Assets With a Trust
At MCIS Law, PLLC, in Stafford, we help Texas families and business owners protect both traditional and digital assets through thoughtful estate planning. From cryptocurrency to online accounts and digital businesses, we ensure nothing valuable is lost or inaccessible.
For a confidential consultation with an experienced Texas estate planning lawyer, email us or call (346) 297-0121. We accept all major credit cards.