Does Your Estate Plan Address Your Cryptocurrency?

Cryptocurrency isn’t the only digital asset your estate plan needs to address. However, it may be the one with the most value. If your estate plan doesn’t address digital assets, or if your executor, or trustee, is unfamiliar with digital assets, those investments could disappear or become inaccessible. This blog will explain what you’ll need to do if you want to pass your digital wealth on to your loved ones.

Crypto owners use a variety of tools to ensure that their assets are not easily accessible. Such protection is vital because Bitcoin is a bearer asset, meaning whoever has access to the asset owns it. Strong protection is great while you’re living. However, if your estate plan isn’t ready, these same protective measures can prevent your loved ones from benefitting from the cryptocurrency you’ve worked to accumulate. Think of it as if you were trying to locate the keys to a loved one’s home, versus trying to get past the facial recognition software on their phone after they’ve been buried.

How you own your digital currency will also make a big difference in what must be done to gain control of it. If they are indirectly owned through exchange-traded funds (ETFs) or stocks owning cryptocurrency, your executor or trustee will access them in the same way they would any other investment account. If you store coins on cryptocurrency exchanges, your executor or trustee will need to access the account. You can share your private keys with beneficiaries, or if the exchange permits you to name beneficiaries for an account, follow the instructions provided by the exchange. Please note that not all exchanges offer this feature.

For the most part, however, cryptocurrency remains the Wild West, and you must protect your property yourself. Don’t expect your executor or trustee to be able to navigate this new world unless they have all the necessary information. There’s no registry or clearing house and no paper trail to follow.

You’ll need to provide the people you have named as executors or trustees with a list of coin names, the number owned and their location: on an exchange, in a digital wallet, or stored offline in a physical device. They’ll need to know how to access private keys or seed phrases.

If your coins are stored on your mobile phone or laptop, someone will require information to unlock these devices. If you use a biometric lock for your phone, such as facial recognition or fingerprint recognition, you’ll need to create an alternative means of accessing the device. Passwords to access cryptocurrency exchanges, digital wallets and those required to access email accounts and authenticator apps used for multifactor authentication will also be needed.

Managing crypto and digital assets during the probate process can be complex for those unfamiliar with the space. Because of this, you may want to choose an executor or trustee that has experience with cryptocurrency.  If your executor or trustee does not have experience with cryptocurrency or other digital assets, you may want to prepare them for the role.

Finally, don’t include any access information in your written estate planning documents, particularly your will. Once a will is admitted to probate, it becomes a public record. Talk with your estate planning attorney about creating a separate document containing this information to be shared with your fiduciaries. Ensure that your fiduciaries are prepared for this task and be sure to appoint a successor in case they are unable or unwilling to serve when the time comes.

If you want your beneficiaries to reap the benefits of your forward-thinking investments, these resources need to be in place and planned for as part of your estate plan.

Reference: Barron’s (June 14, 2025) “You Struck It Rich With Bitcoin. How to Leave It to Your Heirs”

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What Is a ‘Residuary’ Estate?

Sometimes lawyers use words and people don’t know what they mean.  We’ll get carried away explaining complicated legal concepts, ideas, laws, or the beauty of the work we’ve done for clients, only to forget we never defined our terms and the client has no idea what we are talking about.  One common example in estate planning is the “residuary estate” or “residuary clause”.  This blog will address both what that is its relevancy in your estate plan. This is also partially inspired by an article from earlier this year entitled  “How to Write a Residuary Estate Clause in a Will” from yahoo! although be wary as it has some mistakes.

You can also find the definitions of other common terms here:  https://galligan-law.com/common-estate-planning-terms/

The residuary estate is also known as estate residue, residual estate and can also be referred to trust residue or trust estate in that context. It simply means the assets left over after final debts and expenses have been paid and specific distributions are made. It is the general, catch all beneficiary designation of the estate plan.  For the purposes of this blog I’ll talk about it in a will, but it applies to trusts as well.

I’ll use myself as an example.  Let’s say that my wife and I have wills.  The wills don’t control all of our assets, as things like life insurance and retirement plans will be distributed directly to named beneficiaries.  The wills leave everything to the other upon the first of us to die.  If spouse is already deceased (let’s assume I survive because it’s my blog), then I may leave $10,000 to a friend, $50,000 to a charity, my pet to the trustee of a pet trust, a favorite book to my brother and the rest goes to my kids.

In my estate, my executor would pay my final debts and expenses (funeral, medical, final bills, etc), and make the specific distributions which are the money to the friend, charity, pet to the trust and book to my brother.  Whatever is left is the residuary estate, and that’s what goes to my kids.

Now, that assumes competent estate planning.  I would arrange the beneficiaries of my life insurance and retirement plans to coordinate with my wills and other assets to flow through my will because I want them to go to the beneficiaries of the residuary estate.  However, the residuary estate clause of the wills can be disrupted, either deliberately or unintentionally, by common mistakes often made without advance planning.

Here’s some examples of how that happens:

  • You forget to include appropriate assets in your plan to generate the residuary estate.
  • You have accounts that naturally pass outside of the will (e.g. life insurance and retirement) and the beneficiaries aren’t coordinated with the will.
  • You use too many transfer on death designations which take property away from the residuary estate. (This is a very common mistake)
  • If you acquired new assets after making the will that disrupt the flow and plan.
  • Someone named in the will dies before you or is unable to receive the inheritance you left for them.
  • You don’t do your own advanced long-term care planning and the assets which would create the residuary are all spent.
  • You lose the value of the residuary estate to the creditors of the beneficiaries or to the government if a beneficiary is using government benefit.
  • The will has inequitable tax planning that requires the taxes owed on my distributed outside of the will to be paid from the residuary estate.

Speak with an experienced estate planning attorney to determine how to structure your estate plan and assets to ensure the residuary estate and other assets go to the beneficiaries you wish while avoiding the pitfalls.

Reference: yahoo! (Dec. 4, 2022) “How to Write a Residuary Estate Clause in a Will”

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Is Spouse Automatically Your Beneficiary?

People make a grave error when they don’t have an estate plan because they think their surviving spouse is their automatic beneficiary.  The laws of intestacy work differently, as explained in a recent article “Estate Planning: The spouse doesn’t always get everything” from nwi.com.

The surviving spouse doesn’t always receive everything under the intestate laws. This often comes as a surprise to people. In estate administrations without a will, I’m often told the decedent didn’t have a will because “it all goes to the wife anyway” or sometimes even “it all goes to the kids” (but that’s a different blog).

In many states, one half of the decedent’s estate assets are distributed to the spouse and the other half are distributed to the decedent’s child or children.  Similarly, many states have provisions where some property is divided between spouse and decedent’s parents if there are no kids.

To make this a bit more complicated, Texas has community and separate property.  Community property is marital property, and separate property comes from outside of the marriage, such as inheritance from that spouse’s family, a gift or something they distinctly brought to the marriage such as their home.  Separate property is treated differently in intestacy.

If a married couple lives in the separate property residence of a spouse who then dies, the surviving spouse gets a life estate in 1/3 of the property and the children take the rest.  It basically means the spouse stays in the house, but the house ultimately goes to the kids.  This essentially creates a division in which the spouse is expected to pay for some expenses, and the children for the rest.  It tends to be an unhealthy dynamic, to say the least.

Bear in mind the intestate laws only apply to assets in an estate administration.   Assets that pass by contract, such as life insurance to a named beneficiary or an account titled as joint tenants with rights of survivorship pass to those individuals.  This solves part of the property, such as bank accounts, but won’t solve the problem for everything.

I should note too that many people assume everything goes to the spouse because that’s what most people choose in their estate plans.  Practically things do go to spouse, but it required the estate plan to make it happen.  People see the common result and make an assumption on the process.

If you’d prefer to leave more to your spouse, you need a will. Intestacy literally translates to dying without a will. If you have a will and then die, you haven’t died intestate, and the provisions don’t apply.

The key in estate planning is to recognize you have a choice.  If you want everything to go to your spouse, don’t assume it’ll happen. Make it happen in your estate plan.

As one final aside, people also assume spouses can act for them if they are incapacitated.  That also isn’t automatically true and may require guardianship if estate planning doesn’t address it, although a power of attorney may avoid that need.  See here for more:  https://galligan-law.com/do-you-need-power-of-attorney-if-you-have-a-joint-account/

Each state has its own laws of intestacy, so an estate planning attorney who practices in your state needs to be contacted to determine what would happen to your spouse if you didn’t have a will. Your best recommendation is to meet with an experienced estate planning attorney and create a plan to protect your spouse, your children or your chosen beneficiaries.

Reference: nwi.com (Oct. 23, 2022) “Estate Planning: The spouse doesn’t always get everything”

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