You spent years building a crypto Portfolio. You want it to go to your kids or spouse when you die. Here’s what will actually happen if you don’t plan ahead:
You die. Your family finds your will. The will goes through probate court. The probate process takes 6-18 months. During that time, your crypto sits in wallets nobody can access because nobody has the private keys. Or worse, someone finds the private keys but the court won’t let them touch anything until probate closes. Or the executor has the keys but has no idea what they’re doing and accidentally sends everything to the wrong address.
By the time probate finishes, your crypto is either gone, inaccessible, or worth half what it was because the market crashed and nobody could sell.
This happens constantly. Here’s how to avoid it.
The Probate Problem #
Probate is the court process for distributing a dead person’s assets. A judge validates the will, an executor pays debts, and then whatever’s left goes to beneficiaries according to the will.
For a checking account or a stock Portfolio, this is straightforward. The executor contacts the bank or brokerage with a death certificate and court documents. The institution verifies everything and transfers the assets.
For crypto, it’s a nightmare.
Probate is public. Your will becomes a public document. If your will says “I leave my Bitcoin to my son,” that’s public information. Now everyone knows your family has Bitcoin. They don’t know how much or where it is, but they know to look.
Probate is slow. Courts move at government speed. Six months is fast. Eighteen months is common. Two years happens. During this entire time, your crypto is frozen. Markets can crash. Opportunities get missed. Your heirs watch helplessly as the value evaporates.
Probate requires court approval for transactions. Want to sell some Bitcoin to pay estate taxes? File a petition with the court. Wait for a hearing. Get approval. By then the price has moved and you need to file another petition with the new numbers.
Your executor might be an idiot about crypto. You named your responsible brother-in-law who’s great with paperwork. He’s never owned Cryptocurrency and doesn’t understand private keys, Wallet addresses, or Blockchain transactions. He’s going to make mistakes.
Why Crypto Makes This Worse #
Your bank account has customer service. Your executor calls, provides the death certificate and letters testamentary, and the bank transfers the money. There’s a process.
Your Bitcoin Wallet has no customer service. There’s no company to call. No process to follow. Access depends entirely on having the private keys or Seed Phrase.
If nobody can find the keys, the Bitcoin is gone forever. It doesn’t matter what the will says. It doesn’t matter that the judge orders distribution to your heirs. Without the keys, there is no access.
If the keys are sitting in a safe deposit box and probate takes 18 months, the Bitcoin sits untouched for 18 months. Nobody can sell it. Nobody can move it. It just sits there while markets move and opportunities pass.
If your executor finds the keys but doesn’t know what he’s doing, he can destroy everything in seconds. One wrong transaction and your life savings gets sent to an unrecoverable address.
Use a Trust to Skip Probate Entirely #
A revocable living trust is a legal entity you create while you’re alive. You transfer assets into it. You control it while you’re alive. When you die, your chosen successor trustee takes over and distributes assets according to your instructions.
The key advantage: assets in a trust don’t go through probate. They pass directly to beneficiaries according to the trust terms. No court. No public filing. No 18-month delay.
For crypto, this is huge.
You transfer your Bitcoin into the trust’s ownership. Technically, the trust owns it. Practically, you still control it because you’re the trustee. You can buy, sell, trade, whatever you want.
You die. Your successor trustee (your spouse, your adult child, your attorney, whoever you picked) steps in. They have the legal authority to access the trust assets immediately. No probate. No waiting for court approval.
The trust document includes specific instructions for managing the crypto. Where the keys are stored. How to access the wallets. What the distribution plan is. Your successor has everything they need.
This only works if you actually fund the trust. Signing trust documents without transferring the crypto into the trust’s ownership accomplishes nothing. The Bitcoin still belongs to you personally and still goes through probate.
How to Actually Fund a Crypto Trust #
This is where most people screw up.
You can’t just say “my Bitcoin is in the trust.” You need to formally transfer ownership. For crypto, this usually means:
Create a new Wallet in the trust’s name. Not “John Smith’s Wallet.” Something like “The Smith Family Trust dated January 15, 2025, John Smith Trustee.”
Transfer the crypto from your personal wallets to the trust’s Wallet. Actual Blockchain transactions with transaction IDs you can verify.
Document everything. The date of transfer, the amount transferred, the Wallet addresses, the transaction IDs, the value at time of transfer. This proves the trust owns the assets.
Update your records. The trust needs its own accounting showing it owns the crypto. Your personal records should reflect that you transferred the assets out.
Without this formal transfer, you have trust documents that say one thing and reality that says another. When you die, the court looks at who actually owned the assets. If they’re still in your personal wallets, they’re still your personal property subject to probate.
Where to Store the Keys #
The trust owns the crypto. But someone needs access to the private keys.
Don’t put the actual keys in the trust document. That document might get filed with a court or seen by people who shouldn’t have that information. Instead, the trust document should reference separate access instructions.
Create a separate document (not part of the trust) that explains where the keys are and how to access them. Store this in a safe or safe deposit box. Tell your successor trustee where it is.
Or use a multi-signature setup where the trustee is one of the required signers. This gives them access without exposing the keys.
Or use institutional custody where the successor trustee can prove their authority to the Custodian and gain access that way.
The goal is that your successor can get to the keys when they need to, but the keys aren’t exposed to unnecessary risk while you’re alive.
Beneficiary Designations Don’t Really Work for Crypto #
Some people think they can avoid probate by naming beneficiaries on their crypto accounts, like you would with a life Insurance policy or IRA.
This doesn’t work for most crypto.
Coinbase and some exchanges let you name beneficiaries. When you die, your beneficiaries can claim the assets by providing a death certificate. This bypasses probate for whatever’s on that Exchange.
But most crypto isn’t held on exchanges. It’s in self-Custody wallets. Those don’t have beneficiary designation features. There’s no form to fill out naming your kids as beneficiaries of your Ledger Wallet.
Even on exchanges that offer this, you’re limited to what’s on that platform. If you have Bitcoin on Coinbase, Ethereum in MetaMask, and some altcoins on a Hardware Wallet, the beneficiary designation only covers the Coinbase account.
Also, Exchange-held crypto creates custodial risk. FTX customers had beneficiary designations. Those were worthless when FTX collapsed.
Beneficiary designations can be part of your plan, but they shouldn’t be your entire plan.
Document Everything Securely #
Your successor trustee needs to know what you own and where it is.
Create an inventory. List every Wallet, every Exchange account, every Staking position, every DeFi Protocol you’re using. Include Wallet addresses, account usernames (not passwords), approximate holdings, and when you last accessed each.
Update this quarterly or whenever you make significant changes.
Store the inventory somewhere your trustee can find it but others can’t stumble across it. A safe deposit box works. An encrypted file with the password in your trust documents works. A physical document in a safe at home works.
Keep the inventory separate from the actual access credentials. The inventory tells your trustee what exists. The access instructions (stored separately) tell them how to access it.
This way if someone finds the inventory, they know you have crypto but can’t access it. If someone finds the access instructions without the inventory, they have keys but don’t know what they’re for.
What Your Trustee Needs to Know #
Pick a successor trustee who either understands crypto or is willing to learn. Your 75-year-old father who still uses a flip phone is not the right choice, no matter how trustworthy he is.
Your trust should require or strongly encourage the trustee to work with advisors who understand crypto. Allow them to hire technical help. Budget for this in the trust terms.
Consider naming a professional trustee or co-trustee if you don’t have family members with the technical knowledge. This costs money but prevents disasters.
Make sure your chosen trustee knows where to find your access instructions. Having everything properly documented does no good if they don’t know where to look.
Common Ways This Goes Wrong #
Creating a trust but never funding it. The crypto stays in your personal name and goes through probate anyway.
Funding the trust but not documenting it properly. Your family finds crypto in wallets labeled with your personal name and the court treats it as your personal property.
Storing the keys in the trust document itself. The trust gets filed somewhere or seen by someone and now your keys are compromised.
Storing the keys somewhere your trustee can’t find them. You have perfect security and zero accessibility. When you die, the crypto is lost forever.
Picking a trustee who has no idea what they’re doing. They have access but they screw up the transactions and lose everything.
Not updating your plan as your holdings change. Your trust documentation covers the Bitcoin you owned in 2020 but says nothing about the ten other tokens you’ve accumulated since then.
Estate Tax Planning #
A trust doesn’t avoid estate taxes. It avoids probate. Those are different things.
If your estate is large enough to owe federal estate tax (over $13.61 million for individuals in 2024, over $27.22 million for married couples), you need separate Tax Planning. Trusts can be structured to minimize estate taxes, but that requires specific provisions and potentially multiple trusts.
This is complicated and you need an Estate Planning attorney who understands both trusts and current tax law.
The good news is most people don’t have estates large enough to owe federal estate tax. State estate taxes vary – some states have much lower thresholds.
What Digital Ascension Group Does #
Digital Ascension Group helps people set up trusts for crypto and other digital assets.
We handle the operational and administrative work. That includes drafting trust documents with proper crypto provisions, creating asset funding protocols so you actually transfer ownership correctly, establishing secure documentation systems for access instructions, and setting up Governance frameworks that work for digital assets.
We’re not your lawyer (you need one) and we’re not your investment advisor. When investment questions come up, Digital Ascension Group coordinates with Digital Wealth Partners, our affiliated RIA, to make sure you’re getting proper investment advice from registered advisors.
The goal is making sure your trust actually works for crypto. Most trust templates don’t address digital assets properly. We fix that.
Do This Now, Not Later #
Estate Planning is one of those things people put off until it’s too late.
You’re not going to die tomorrow. Probably. But you might. And if you do, your family deals with the consequences of your lack of planning.
Set up a trust. Fund it properly. Document your access methods securely. Make sure your trustee knows where to find everything.
Do it while you’re healthy and not under pressure. Do it before the market crashes and your heirs watch helplessly as the value evaporates during probate. Do it before you get in an accident and become incapacitated with nobody able to access your crypto.
The younger you are, the more important this is. You probably have decades of potential crypto appreciation ahead of you. Plan now for how those assets will eventually transfer.