Most families talk about everything.
Where to spend the holidays. Whether to sell the house. Who gets the jewelry. What kind of funeral. These conversations are hard but families have them — because they have to, and because love makes difficult things possible.
There is one conversation almost nobody has.
What happens to the digital life.
Why Most Families Skip the Digital Estate Plan
Your family knows roughly what you own. They know about the house, the car, the bank accounts, the retirement fund. They may even know where the will is.
What they almost certainly don’t know: the password to your email. The login for the online banking app. Where the photos from the last twenty years are stored. Whether you have cryptocurrency and how to access it. What subscriptions are still charging your card. The final messages you always meant to write but never did.
This isn’t carelessness. It’s human nature. Nobody wants to sit down with the people they love most and walk through what happens when they’re gone. It feels morbid. It feels premature. There is always more time.
Until there isn’t.
What Happens Without a Family Digital Estate Plan
A family digital estate plan starts with a conversation most people never have. Families talk about everything — the house, the will, the funeral — but almost nobody talks about what happens to the digital life when someone’s gone.
The Conversation Doesn’t Have to Be Dark
Here’s what most people get wrong about this conversation: it doesn’t have to be about death. It can be about love.
I want to make sure you’re never stuck, that you have everything you need, and that nothing important disappears.
That’s not a conversation about dying. That’s a conversation about caring for the people who will still be here.
The practical version covers three things. Where everything is. What you want to happen to it. Who is responsible. Twenty minutes. One conversation. The relief on the other side of it — for both people — is significant.
Why the Family Digital Estate Plan Never Gets Done
Because there’s no forcing function. A will has legal consequences if you don’t have one. A digital estate plan has nothing — no deadline, no reminder, no consequence until the moment it’s too late to fix.
This is the gap Vesperly was built to close.
The conversation your family needs to have isn’t about death. It’s about making sure the people you love are never left without answers.
A family digital estate plan doesn’t require a lawyer or a big time commitment. It takes about 20 minutes.
Have it before it has you.
Vesperly is a zero-knowledge encrypted digital legacy vault. Start free at vesperly.com




