Passwords for Trustees: The Ultimate Estate Planning Plot Twist
SimplyTrust

Passwords for Trustees: The Ultimate Estate Planning Plot Twist

May 5, 2025

It’s easy to forget passwords for trustees because it’s easy to forget passwords for ourselves. But don’t. Please.

Does your trustee have the passwords they need to do what they need to do? If not, you may have just handed them the world’s worst escape room: no keys and no clues. Let’s talk about passwords for trustees—because if you forget this part, all your planning might as well be in invisible ink. 

Famous Last Words: “I Forgot My Password”

Let’s be honest—who hasn’t forgotten a password or three? At this point, most of us are one lockout away from throwing our phones into a volcano. And yet, we still somehow expect our trustees to gracefully navigate our password-protected universe.

They’ll need access to:

  • Bank accounts
  • Investment platforms
  • Email (because guess where the two-factor codes go)
  • Cloud storage
  • Cryptocurrency wallets (i.e., digital Fort Knox)

If they don’t have your passwords, they don’t have your digital assets. Simple as that.

Why Passwords for Trustees Matter (A Lot)

These days, assets aren’t just locked in safes—they’re floating in cyberspace, guarded by 16-character strings you made up in a fit of paranoia.

Without passwords:

  • Your trustee can’t pay bills or distribute funds.
  • Digital subscriptions keep auto-renewing into the next century.
  • Important emails go unread.
  • And your Bitcoin? Poof. Gone into the blockchain abyss.

Your trustee needs the keys to your kingdom. Otherwise, they’re just standing outside the gates, holding a beautifully written trust document, whispering “open sesame” to an iPad.

How to Hand Off Passwords Without Handing Over Your Life

You don’t need to write down your Gmail password on a sticky note and tape it to your trust. (Please don’t.) Here are better ways to make sure passwords for trustees are accessible—without also making them public domain:

Use a Password Manager

Password managers like 1Password or LastPass let you store and share credentials securely. Some even let you assign emergency access to your trustee—so they can get in if you’re ever unable to.

Bonus: You can stop using the same password for everything (looking at you, “Password123”).

Leave a Digital Access Plan

Create a digital inventory. List out:

  • The accounts that matter
  • What they’re for
  • Where the logins are stored

You don’t need to include the passwords in plain text. Just make it clear how to find them—whether in a password manager, safe, or encrypted USB.

Update Passwords for Trustees Like a Normal Human Being

In other words, never. 

Just kidding—please do update it. At least once per year. And every time you change a major password (like the one to your online banking). Otherwise, your trustee is stuck with a roadmap to 2009.

Don’t Let a Missing Password Tank Your Trust

You can have the most airtight estate plan in the world, but if your trustee can’t get into your accounts, they might as well be trying to drive a car with no keys.

So yes, passwords for trustees matter. A lot. They’re the behind-the-scenes heroes of estate planning. Give your trustee what they need to actually do the job. Or at least leave them something more helpful than a sticky note that says “my password is in my other pants.”