Digital Estate and Legacy Planning Week 6: Keep Your Money Accessible
Find out how to keep your online and financial accounts easy for loved ones to find, access, and manage when it really counts.
You can find Weeks 1-5 of this series at TheSeniorTechie.com.
Your family could spend months locked out of accounts you manage in seconds today.
When Banks Freeze, Families Panic
The moment a bank learns an account holder has died, they freeze the account. It is standard procedure. If you are the only name on the account and there is no beneficiary listed, your family cannot simply log in and pay the mortgage. They cannot even view the balance without court authority.
This recently happened to a widow. She spent six weeks unable to pay her husband’s final medical bills. His checking account was frozen and she was not named as a payable-on-death beneficiary. The money was there. She simply could not touch it. The hospital billing department was not sympathetic to probate delays.
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Name a Beneficiary on Every Account
This is the simplest fix in all of estate planning. Contact your bank and ask for a payable-on-death, or POD, beneficiary form. Fill it out. Do the same for your investment accounts, which often use transfer-on-death, or TOD, designations.
Checking and savings accounts: Ask for POD forms
Investment and brokerage accounts: Request TOD designations
Retirement accounts: Review beneficiaries annually
Annuities and life insurance: Confirm named recipients
These designations bypass probate entirely. Your beneficiary walks into the bank with a death certificate and an ID. The account transfers directly. No judge. No months of waiting. No legal fees eating away at the balance.
The Autopay Trap You Must Plan For
Your utilities, insurance, and subscriptions do not know you have passed away. Autopay keeps pulling money from a frozen account, which triggers overdraft fees. Or worse, the payments stop and your home goes dark because the electric bill lapsed while everyone is grieving.
Make a simple list. Write down every bill that autopays from your accounts. Include the company name, the account number, and which bank or credit card it draws from. Note whether the bill is essential to keep running, like heat in winter, or optional, like a streaming service. Your executor needs this roadmap to prioritize what matters.
Store Access Without Creating Risk
Your will becomes a public document when you die. Never put passwords inside it. Instead, use a password manager with an emergency access feature. Alternatively, keep a sealed, updated list in a secure location your executor knows about.
Your estate documents should specifically name a digital executor. This person needs legal authority to handle online accounts, not just your house and car. Without that specific language, a bank can legally refuse to grant access even to your own child. State laws vary, so ask your attorney to include clear digital asset authorization.
Take One Action Today
Pick one financial account you use regularly. Log in and check whether it has a named beneficiary. If not, call the institution tomorrow and request the form. While you are at it, jot down three bills that autopay. That is your start.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is a POD account?
A: Payable-on-death accounts transfer directly to your named beneficiary without going through probate.
Q: Can my family access my online banking after I die?
A: No, banks freeze individual accounts upon death unless there is a joint owner or named beneficiary.
Q: What happens to autopay bills when someone dies?
A: Autopay continues until canceled or the account freezes, which can cause overdrafts or unpaid bills.
Q: Should I put my passwords in my will?
A: Never. Wills become public record, so store passwords separately in a secure password manager or sealed document.
Q: What is a digital executor?
A: Digital executors are people named in your estate documents with legal authority to manage or close your online accounts and digital assets.
Which financial account will you check first for its beneficiary designation?



Great info. I had not thought about autopay accounts and digital password. Thanks!
Thank you! Far too many people do not know these important issues.