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Safeguard Your Cryptocurrency Assets With Estate Planning


One of the biggest appeals of cryptocurrency, like Bitcoin, is that it is decentralized, unregulated, and anonymous. There are no financial institutions controlling it, and unless you tell someone you own digital currency, it remains a secret.



As this article demonstrates - when it comes to estate planning, however, that kind of secrecy can lead to disaster. Without the appropriate planning protections in place, all of your crypto wealth will disappear the moment you die or become incapacitated, leaving your family with absolutely no way to recover it.

Millions—perhaps billions—of dollars of family wealth that could potentially vanish into thin air unless you take action to protect your digital assets with estate planning. Fortunately, putting the appropriate safeguards in place is a fairly simple process for an estate planning attorney experienced with cryptocurrency.

Tip 1: Let Your Heirs Know You Own Cryptocurrency

The first step in securing your crypto assets is to let your heirs know you own it. This can be done by including your digital currency in your net-worth statement – which lists all of your assets and liabilities.

Tip 2: Keep Instructions on How to Access your Cryptocurrency (But in a Safe Place)

Along with the amount of cryptocurrency you own, you should also include detailed instructions about where it’s located and how to find the instructions to access it. Those instructions, however, must be kept in an absolutely secure location because anyone who has them can take your cryptocurrency. Even if your heirs know you own cryptocurrency, they won’t be able to access it unless they know the encrypted passcodes needed to unlock your account. Indeed, there are numerous stories of crypto owners losing their own passcodes and then being so desperate to recover or remember them that they dug through trash cans and even hired hypnotists.

Tip 3: Use a Digital Wallet

The best way to secure your passcodes is by storing them in a digital wallet. The safest option is a “cold” wallet or one that is not connected to the internet and thus cannot be hacked. Cold wallets include USB drives as well as “paper” wallets, which are simply passcodes printed on paper—and ideally stored in a fireproof safe.


Read more about passcode security HERE.

Tip 4: Tell Your Estate Planning Attorney

The only way these wallets are of any use to your heirs is for them to know where they are and how to access them in the event of your incapacity or death. So make sure these instructions are included in your estate plan and your Estate Planning Attorney knows about the assets and where to locate the instructions on how to access them. Since digital currency is such a recent phenomenon, not all estate planning attorneys are familiar with it, but at the Ritchie Law Office, Ltd. you can rest assured we have the knowledge and experience to help you safeguard your digital wealth just as effectively as all of your other assets.

Conclusion

Just as it would be foolish to store your money in a secret safe and not tell anybody where it is or give them the combination to open it, it’s just as foolhardy not to take the appropriate steps to protect your cryptocurrency through proper estate planning.

 

This article is a service of Attorney Chad A. Ritchie and the Ritchie Law Office, Ltd.

Click Here or call (309) 662-7000 to learn more about Ritchie Law Office, Ltd. and our Estate Planning process, which starts with an initial consultation called our “Ritchie Legacy Planning Session”.

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 © 2024 Ritchie Law Office, Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer:  Your use of this site does not create an attorney-client relationship between you and Ritchie Law Office, Ltd or attorney Chad A. Ritchie. Any information that you send through this site or by unsolicited email will not be treated as confidential or subject to privilege. The materials on this site are presented for informational and promotional purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. You should not act or refrain from acting on the basis of any content in this site without seeking appropriate legal advice regarding your own particular facts and circumstances from an attorney licensed to practice law in your state. The content of this site contains general information and may not reflect current legal developments, verdicts or settlements. Any description of prior results on this site does not constitute a guarantee of a similar outcome.

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