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Author Topic: A serious concern: people die, accounts are lost — is there any way to “inherit”  (Read 78 times)
drgomez89 (OP)
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December 28, 2025, 06:30:44 PM
 #1

Hi everyone,
I’d like to raise a serious and often overlooked issue.
People pass away, and when that happens, accounts, wallets, and digital assets can be permanently lost. Unlike traditional banking systems, in crypto there is often no clear mechanism for inheritance.
This makes me wonder:
Is there any app, service, or protocol designed to securely handle crypto inheritance?
Are there practical solutions people are currently using (multi-sig, trusted third parties, legal setups, smart contracts)?
How do you balance security while alive with access for heirs in case something happens?
I’m not asking for private details or instructions — just looking for general ideas, tools, or experiences that people are comfortable sharing.
This feels like a real problem as adoption grows, and I’m curious how the community is approaching it.
Looking forward to your thoughts.
Stalker22
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December 28, 2025, 07:43:41 PM
 #2

Personally, I like practical solutions.  For instance, a solution that uses a metal plate backup of your seedphrase with instructions on how to recover the wallet stored at the same location or with a memory that is stored somewhere safe, such as in a bank safe deposit box.  Finally, the last thing I would want to add is to let anyone know in your testament that you hold one or more crypto assets, but you should not include any information that may expose yourself to a potential data breach or loss of your private key(s).
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January 01, 2026, 03:25:30 PM
 #3

If you want to get fancy without getting stupid, multisig is the clean middle ground. Nobody can unilaterally run off with it, but your heirs aren't stuck needing a dead person's password either.

The best setups I've seen discussed here are the ones where keys are split across places and/or people that don't fail the same way (family + lawyer/executor + your own backup), and where you actually do a dry-run once so you don't discover the "instructions" are missing one tiny detail that bricks the whole thing.
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January 03, 2026, 07:56:44 PM
 #4

This is one of those things that everyone tends to ignore until it hits home. Everyone worries about hacks. But personally, I think there is a lot more crypto lost due to owners being gone and no one knows what to do next.

This, to me, is the downside of having full control. Cryptocurrencies don't have a built in next of kin kind of deal. If a person doesn't make those types of arrangements in advance, their life savings could be locked up forever. That is a powerful system, but also scary. 

I also don't think there is any way to solve the problem that is magic, either. Giving one person you can really trust can be risky too. If you over complicate the system, your family members will just get confused and they'll not know what to do. A system that is straightforward and easy to understand is over better than one that is complicated. 

I think that as more people begin to participate in crypto, more people will begin to ask questions about lost crypto. What will happens to your crypto when you die? Everyone seems to understand the value of the assets, but if those assets become worthless if something happens to the person who owns them, that is a satisfactory value.
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Today at 03:21:43 PM
Last edit: Today at 06:51:15 PM by Ucy
 #5

Whatever the banks do for centralized inheritance can easily be done for Bitcoin in centralized manner too. They could create centralized regulated services with vaults where users can send their keys to for future recovery if lost, or transfer to next of kin incase of imprisonment, abduction or death of the owners. But we don't want to go that route, as we chose the decentralized path and prefer to build things according to this path. But we do not prevent others from creating such centralized services.




✴️Our decentralized solution would be:

* Timelock: — just lock your bitcoins and set it to unlock at a particular date. Give the Bitcoin private key (or seedphrase) to your love one (keep one for yourself), and tell him/her the coins could only be accessed at the unlock date (let say Feb 15) if you are incapacitated, nolonger alive or unavailable. If you survive till that time when the coin unlocks you can relock it for another Feb 15.

* Auto send feature: With this feature in place, all your coins in different addresses will auto send to a single address that you and your love one control, incase you are nolonger using the addresses. This could be programmed with some sort of "smart escrow" addresses without sacrificing on decentralization.
So you could simply give your love one empty address with keys(while you hold one) where all your bitcoins can be autosent to at a particular date incase you are nolonger active or using the addresses. But if it autosend while you are still alive, you can press a single button and the coins are sent back to their previous addresses

 * Vaulted encrypted keys: Encrypt your bitcoin private keys, save and lock it in a decentralized vault (not sure if such vault exist yet). Give your love one the vault key, and Bitcoin decryption key should be given to a church or institution who will hand it over to your love one once your death certificate is presented. The vault should contain instructions how to decrypt the Bitcoin keys

Etc..

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