Death and Crypto: How to Ensure Your Heirs Inherit Your Digital Wealth

Jeff Opdyke (Jeffo)
7 min readMay 30, 2023

In the end, we’re all dead … yet, our crypto lives on.

Question is: Will it remain locked in your wallet forever, never to again see the generative pixel light of a digital day? Or will it go to your heirs — so they can complain about why didn’t sell the top when you were alive in the first place?

I’ve been contemplating this issue myself over the last year or so. My crypto wealth has reached a stage where it’s certainly bigger than a bread box, and if I died tomorrow the people I care about most in the world would have zero way of accessing my crypto and NFT holdings.

Which is where Webacy joins our story…

(NOTE: This story is appearing simultaneously with my post on my Subtack newsletter Jeffo’s Ministry of Alpha. I am posting is simultaneously because the story is about the value of what Webacy provides, rather than an investment recommendation, which always appears in Ministry of Alpha first.)

San Francisco-based Webacy launched in 2021 and raised more than $5 million in a venture-capital seed round. What those VC investors saw is a new and innovative way to both protect crypto assets in the here and now, and a way of ensuring that they live on when you depart for the ever-after.

Webacy accomplishes this through two primary products: Wallet Watch (and its associated “Panic Button”) and Crypto Will.

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Jeff Opdyke (Jeffo)

Former Wall Street Journal writer living in Prague. Crypto and investing. Editor Global Intelligence Letter. Also on Substack: jeffoalpha.substack.com/