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Estate Planning

Digital Legacy vs Traditional Estate Planning: What's The Difference?

Last updated: July 2026 8 min read AfterMyPass.com Editorial Team
Legal documents and scales of justice representing estate planning and digital legacy planning

Traditional estate planning and digital legacy planning address different halves of the same problem — you need both.

Legal Disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a qualified estate planning attorney for advice specific to your situation.

If you already have a will, you might assume your digital life is covered. It probably isn't. Traditional estate planning was built for a world of physical assets — property, vehicles, savings accounts, investment portfolios, and personal possessions. It works well for all of those things. But it was not designed for the complexity of a modern digital life, and in most cases it leaves significant gaps that only digital legacy planning can fill.

This guide explains both types of planning, how they overlap, where they diverge, and why you need both working together to fully protect your family.

What Traditional Estate Planning Covers

Traditional estate planning is the formal legal process of deciding what happens to your physical and financial assets after you die. Its core documents include:

Traditional estate planning works through a well-established legal system with clear processes for probate, title transfer, and distribution of assets. Banks, insurers, and courts all understand how to handle it.

What Digital Legacy Planning Covers

Digital legacy planning addresses assets and obligations that traditional estate planning typically misses entirely. It covers:

Where They Overlap

The two types of planning overlap in one critical area: legal authority. Your traditional will can — and should — include provisions that extend your executor's authority to digital assets. In the US, the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA) provides the legal framework for this. But RUFADAA only applies if your will explicitly grants authority over digital assets. Most wills drafted before 2015 don't include this language, and many drafted since then still don't include it specifically enough.

This is the most important connection between the two types of planning. Traditional estate planning provides the legal structure. Digital legacy planning provides the practical content. Together, they give your executor both the authority and the information they need.

Key Differences at a Glance

Who handles it: Traditional estate planning is managed by a solicitor or estate attorney and works through the court system. Digital legacy planning is managed by your digital executor and works through direct contact with platforms and exchanges.

What evidence is needed: Traditional executors use letters testamentary from a probate court. Digital executors may need death certificates, proof of relationship, the platform's specific bereavement documentation, and sometimes legal authority documentation — all varying by platform.

Speed: Traditional estate settlement takes months to years. Digital account management can and should happen within the first few weeks after death, especially for subscriptions and financial accounts.

What happens without planning: Without a traditional estate plan, assets pass through intestate succession laws — imperfect but functional. Without a digital legacy plan, assets like cryptocurrency can be permanently lost, photos can be deleted, and the burden on your family is significantly greater.

Do You Need Both?

Yes — but they do not need to be done simultaneously. If you already have a traditional estate plan, you primarily need to add a digital assets clause to your will (a relatively straightforward addition your attorney can make) and then create a separate digital legacy plan covering the practical components.

If you are starting from scratch, the most practical approach is to begin with the digital legacy plan — it has immediate practical value and can be done without a lawyer. Then formalize the legal components with an estate attorney who can ensure both your traditional will and your digital provisions are properly integrated.

The goal is simple: your family should never need to guess what you wanted or struggle to access what you owned. A traditional estate plan combined with a digital legacy plan makes that possible. Start with our free 30-item checklist to identify the gaps in your current planning.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is digital legacy planning part of traditional estate planning?

Not traditionally — most estate plans drafted before 2020 do not address digital assets adequately. However, the two are increasingly integrated. A well-drafted estate plan should include a digital assets clause in the will, and a digital legacy plan should reference the legal authority granted by the will.

Can my existing will cover my cryptocurrency?

Only if it explicitly includes a digital assets clause granting your executor authority over cryptocurrency and specifying where access information is stored. A generic 'all my property' clause is typically insufficient for cryptocurrency held in self-custody wallets. Consult an estate attorney to update your will.

What is RUFADAA and why does it matter?

RUFADAA stands for the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act. It is a law adopted by most US states that gives executors legal authority to access digital accounts — but only when explicitly granted in the will. Without it, family members may have no legal right to access online accounts even with a death certificate.

Can I name different people for my traditional and digital estates?

Yes. You can name the same person as both your traditional executor and digital executor, or different people. Many people choose a more tech-savvy family member or friend as their digital executor, even if a different person handles the traditional estate.

Which should I do first — traditional or digital estate planning?

If you have neither, start with the digital legacy plan — it has immediate practical value, can be done without a lawyer, and reduces the risk of permanent asset loss. Then formalize both the traditional and digital legal components with an estate planning attorney.

Cover Both Plans With Our Free Checklist

Our free 30-item checklist walks you through every step of your digital estate plan.

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Need Professional Legal Advice?

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