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Help Your Executor: Secured Places and Passwords

Does your executor know how to find the things you've hidden?

When it's time to wind up your estate, your executor will need to find information and items that may be hidden away or protected by passwords: everything from your electronic banking records to your email accounts, from your safe deposit box to a home alarm.

You can provide essential directions for your executor for each locked place, login, or security measure. Here are some tips to get you started.

Services and Products

Make a list of each service and product for which you have a user name and password or personal identification number (PIN). Common items include:

  • computers
  • Internet service providers or Web hosting services
  • email accounts
  • online services
  • software applications, and
  • cell phones.

For each item on your list, note your account name or number and any password or PIN.

Home and Vehicle Security

List all the ways you protect your home, vehicles, or other property. Be sure to include the following:

  • vehicle and home alarm systems
  • home safes
  • mailboxes or gates, and
  • locked boxes, drawers, or cabinets.

For each item, note passwords, combinations, or the locations of keys.

Safe Deposit Boxes

If you have a safe deposit box, you'll want to be certain that your executor knows where it is. But you should also think carefully about what you put in your box. Your executor may not have access to the box immediately after your death, so it's usually not the best place to store information your executor will need right away, such as your wishes for burial or cremation, or your will.

When you're comfortable with your safe deposit box arrangements, make a list of each box you currently rent. You'll want to include the following:

  • contact information for the bank or other financial institution
  • a list of the people who have authorized access to the box
  • the box number
  • the location of the box keys, and
  • a brief description of what the box contains.

Other Assets, Other Locations

Think about any other property you may have safely hidden away. What little-known arrangements should you map out for your executor? Be sure to make a list of:

  • financial assets that are not stored at a financial institution
  • valuable items that your survivors may not find without direction, and
  • other information known only to you such as special recipes or a map to buried treasure.

Describe each item, its location, and the location of any documents related to the item such as appraisal records or a storage agreement.

Keeping Your Information Safe

You can keep this sensitive information away from prying eyes by making sure that only your executor and others you choose will have access to it. Store your list of protected products, services, and places in a secure location, such as a waterproof, fireproof home safe. Then be certain to tell your executor and any other loved ones who may need the information to care for you or your property how to get to it.

Tip Erase sensitive information. If you make your list of passwords and other information on a computer, remember to delete the files from your hard drive when you're finished. You can store the list on a disk or CD that you keep with the list itself.

Remember to update your information periodically, listing new protected products, services, or places, and noting any changes to existing arrangements.

For other tips on making your estate plan easier to carry out, see Practical Estate Planning: Organize Your Documents.

Help Getting Organized

To help you organize your important information, and for additional tips on using safe deposit boxes, you can turn to Nolo's Get It Together: Organize Your Records So Your Family Won't Have To, by Melanie Cullen with Shae Irving. This workbook with CD-ROM provides a complete system for documenting information for your executor and other loved ones.

http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/help-executor-secured-places-passwords-29669.html

More about this Topics

  • How Is an Estate Settled If Theres No Will: Intestate Succession

  • Grounds for Challenging a Will

  • Durable Financial Power of Attorney: How it Works

  • How Joint Owners Can Transfer Survivorship Property After Death

  • Helping an Elder Make a Power of Attorney

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    • Practical Estate Planning: Organize Your Documents
    • When Your Parent Loses a Mate: How to Help
    • Conservatorships and Adult Guardianships
    • Reduce Estate Tax by Making Gifts
    • Why You May Not Need a Living Trust
    • Birth Death Divorce or Marriage Records
    • American Bar Association
    • Are You Prepared?
    • Responsibilities of an Executor
    • Estate Planning for the Middle Class: Part 1—What Is It ? Why Do I Need It ?
    • Getting Your Affairs in Order
    • Living Wills and Powers of Attorney for Health Care: How They Work
    • Will Codicil
    • Property Work Sheet
    • Notice of Revocation of Power of Attorney
    • General Notice of Death
    • Obituary Information Fact Sheet