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Digital Assets in Your Will: Crypto, UPI, Social Media, and Cloud Accounts

If your Will only mentions bank accounts and property, it is already a decade out of date. Cryptocurrency holdings, UPI balances, social media accounts, cloud storage of family photos, online subscriptions, domain names — all are part of the modern estate. Here is how to handle them.

Digital Assets in Your Will: Crypto, UPI, Social Media, and Cloud Accounts

The digital asset blind spot

Indian estate planning advice — even from competent advocates — has tended to focus on traditional asset classes: bank accounts, fixed deposits, property, jewellery, business interests. The digital dimension has been a footnote at best. But for an urban Indian under 50, digital assets now routinely account for a meaningful fraction of net worth, sentimental value, and identity. A Will that ignores them is a Will that fails to deliver part of what it should.

This article walks through the major categories of digital assets, why each matters in an estate context, and how to handle them in your Will and supporting documents.

Category 1: Cryptocurrency

Cryptocurrency presents the largest single estate-planning blind spot for digitally engaged Indians. If you hold Bitcoin, Ethereum, or any other crypto asset, the following must be addressed in your estate plan:

The fundamental problem: access

Crypto held in a wallet you control (a "non-custodial" wallet) is only accessible through the private key or seed phrase. If you die without sharing how to access these credentials, the crypto is effectively lost — there is no central authority to recover it, no bank to call, no court order that can compel a blockchain to reassign ownership.

Estimates suggest that 20-30% of all Bitcoin ever mined is permanently inaccessible because the owners died, lost keys, or forgot passwords. This is the dominant estate-planning failure mode for crypto.

Crypto held on Indian exchanges

If your crypto is on a centralised Indian exchange (WazirX, CoinDCX, etc.), it operates more like a brokerage account. You can typically nominate or designate beneficiaries, and the exchange will transfer holdings to the nominee/heir on production of death certificate and KYC documents. This is the safer custodial model — at the cost of trusting the exchange's solvency and operations.

Crypto held on foreign exchanges or in self-custody

Higher complexity. The exchange may have its own succession process (often inadequate for non-domestic users). Self-custody requires sharing credentials in a controlled, secure manner.

The recommended approach

  • List crypto holdings in the Will by approximate quantity and wallet type, without revealing private keys in the Will itself (the Will becomes a public document after probate).
  • Maintain a separate "credential locker" with secure encrypted storage of seed phrases, exchange logins, wallet addresses. Tools like password managers, encrypted offline backups, or specialised crypto-inheritance services can be used.
  • Inform your executor of the locker's existence and how to access it (e.g., via a sealed envelope held with your advocate, only to be opened on death).
  • Address the 30% Indian tax on crypto gains — heirs inheriting crypto don't pay tax on the inheritance itself, but capital gains tax applies on subsequent disposal at 30%.

Category 2: UPI and digital wallet balances

UPI itself is a payment system, not a balance — but the linked bank account follows standard banking succession rules. The balances that need attention are in digital wallets like PhonePe, Paytm, Google Pay (where wallets hold money), and Amazon Pay.

These wallets typically:

  • Have a nominee facility
  • Allow transfer to nominee on death certificate submission
  • Are usually low-balance (a few thousand rupees), but worth addressing

Your Will's residuary clause typically covers these implicitly, but listing each wallet in your asset inventory ensures your executor knows to claim them.

Category 3: Online brokerage and trading accounts

Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, INDmoney, and similar platforms hold a substantial fraction of urban Indian millennial wealth. Each has its own nomination and transmission process — similar to traditional demat accounts but operationally smoother because of better digital onboarding.

Verify nominee is registered for each. Include the platform name and login email in your asset inventory. The Will can either name specific beneficiaries for these holdings or let the residuary clause cover them.

Category 4: Social media accounts

Facebook, Instagram, X (Twitter), LinkedIn, YouTube — these accounts have no monetary value to most users but carry significant sentimental, professional, or business value. After death:

Facebook

Offers a "Memorialised Account" option (account remains visible but cannot be logged into) or full deletion. You can designate a "Legacy Contact" in advance who can manage the memorialised account.

Instagram

Similar memorialisation or deletion options. Family members can request memorialisation by submitting documentation.

LinkedIn

Allows account closure by next of kin on submission of death certificate.

YouTube channels

If the channel monetises and is part of your income, this is a digital business worth handling carefully. Google's Inactive Account Manager lets you specify what happens to your account after inactivity. Channel ownership can be transferred to a beneficiary through Google's process.

X (Twitter), TikTok, Reddit

Each has its own policy, generally allowing account closure but not transfer of ownership.

Include in your Will: a clause directing your executor to either memorialise specified accounts, transfer ownership of monetising accounts to named beneficiaries, or delete others. List the platforms; refer the executor to your credential locker for actual login details.

Category 5: Cloud storage and digital archives

Google Drive, iCloud, OneDrive, Dropbox — these often contain decades of family photographs, tax records, important documents. Without access credentials, all of this is lost to the family after death.

Steps:

  • Designate which family members should receive access to which storage
  • Store master account credentials in your credential locker
  • Use Apple's Legacy Contact feature (for iCloud), Google's Inactive Account Manager (for Google Drive/Photos), or Microsoft's Next of Kin process
  • For tax records, deeds, and family documents, consider creating a "for the family" shared folder during your lifetime — eliminates the access problem entirely

Category 6: Domain names and online intellectual property

If you own domain names, websites, mobile apps, registered trademarks, copyrighted creative works, or any intellectual property held online:

  • Specifically identify each in your Will
  • Provide registrar account login details to your executor (via credential locker)
  • Specify the beneficiary or whether they should be sold for the benefit of the residuary estate
  • Address the renewal of registrations — domains in particular lapse if not renewed

Category 7: Subscription accounts and recurring payments

Netflix, Spotify, Amazon Prime, Apple One, software subscriptions, cloud hosting — each is a recurring expense that should be cancelled after death to avoid auto-renewals draining the estate. Your executor needs:

  • List of active subscriptions
  • The card or bank account being charged
  • Cancellation instructions

This is operational, not strategic — but if not handled, leakage of small amounts can continue for years after death.

Category 8: Email accounts

Often the master access point for everything else — bank password resets, brokerage logins, social media. The primary email account is therefore the most critical credential to plan for.

  • Google's Inactive Account Manager lets you designate trusted contacts who can access your account after a defined period of inactivity
  • Apple's Legacy Contact provides similar functionality for iCloud-linked Apple ID
  • Microsoft's Next of Kin process allows family to request access to a deceased user's Outlook/Hotmail account

Category 9: Online businesses

If you run any kind of online business — e-commerce store, Substack newsletter, YouTube channel earning revenue, paid Telegram community — this is a digital business with continuing operational requirements and income. Like any business, it needs succession planning:

  • Specific bequest in the Will to the appropriate heir
  • Operational handover plan (who runs it the day after you die?)
  • Access to all relevant accounts (Shopify, Stripe, payment gateways, customer support tools)
  • Continuity of customer-facing operations

The credential locker concept

The single most important practical tool for digital estate planning is what we call a "credential locker" — a single, securely accessible repository of all the credentials your executor would need.

Options:

  • Password manager with emergency access: Tools like 1Password, Bitwarden, and LastPass have "emergency access" features that allow designated contacts to request access after a waiting period.
  • Encrypted file with a trusted advocate: Sealed envelope or encrypted USB drive held with your advocate, accessible only on production of death certificate.
  • Specialised digital inheritance services: Services like Notary AI, Dead Man's Switch, and Inheritus exist specifically for this use case.
  • Bank locker with paper backup: Lower-tech but reliable — printed seed phrases, account login details, recovery codes in a sealed envelope.

The locker is referenced in the Will but its contents are NOT included in the Will itself (since Wills become public after probate). The locker is the secure operational counterpart to the legal document.

A Will clause covering digital assets

Sample language:

"I direct my executor to access, manage, transfer, or close any of my digital accounts, online subscriptions, cloud storage, social media accounts, cryptocurrency wallets, and other digital assets as appropriate. My executor shall have full authority under applicable laws (including the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, and any applicable platform-specific procedures) to act on my behalf in respect of such digital assets.

The credentials necessary to access these digital assets are maintained in a separate credential locker held with [advocate's name / password manager / bank locker location]. My executor is hereby authorised and directed to access the same upon production of my death certificate.

Specific bequests of digital assets are as follows: [list specific bequests of crypto holdings, online businesses, domain names, etc. by category and approximate value]"

The DPDP Act and digital assets

The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 introduced India's first comprehensive data protection law. It addresses what happens to personal data after death — including provisions for nominees who can exercise data rights on behalf of a deceased individual. This is an evolving area but materially supportive of digital estate planning.

Action items

  1. Make a list of all your digital assets, organised by category
  2. For each, identify the current access credentials
  3. Set up a credential locker (password manager, encrypted document, sealed envelope with advocate)
  4. Configure platform-specific legacy options (Google, Apple, Facebook)
  5. Update your Will to include digital asset provisions
  6. Inform your executor of the credential locker's existence and access mechanism

Half a day. The relief to your family of being able to access decades of family photos and not lose access to your professional digital identity is immeasurable. Talk to your advocate about including a comprehensive digital asset clause in your next Will update.

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