When a Canadian dies, their physical assets — bank accounts, property, vehicles, jewellery — are relatively straightforward to find and transfer. But the digital world is different. Email accounts, social media profiles, cryptocurrency wallets, online banking portals, streaming subscriptions, loyalty points, and digital photo collections all exist in a legal and practical grey zone that most Canadians have never thought about.
It's important to distinguish between two categories:
These are services you pay for or use but don't "own" — you have a license to use them under terms of service. Examples: Netflix, Spotify, Amazon Prime, Gmail, Facebook, Instagram, iCloud storage, LinkedIn. When you die, these accounts typically cannot be transferred. They close. Any content you "purchased" through iTunes or Kindle may not be passable to heirs in the traditional sense.
These are things of actual value that you own. Examples: cryptocurrency (Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc.), PayPal and Venmo balances, online business accounts (Etsy, Shopify revenue), domain names, digital art/NFTs, online banking portal funds (the underlying bank account is transferable even if the portal login isn't), loyalty points and airline miles (policy-dependent).
Canada has one of the highest cryptocurrency ownership rates globally. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other crypto assets can represent substantial value — sometimes an entire retirement portfolio. The challenge: cryptocurrency held in a personal wallet is secured by a private key (a long alphanumeric string or a seed phrase). If your family doesn't have that key, the cryptocurrency is permanently inaccessible. Forever. There is no bank to call, no court order that will unlock it.
Steps to ensure your crypto is accessible to your heirs:
The major platforms each have different policies:
You can request memorialization of a Facebook profile (it becomes a memorial page) or request deletion. You can designate a "Legacy Contact" who manages the memorial page but cannot log in as you or see private messages. Instagram can be memorialized or deleted upon request with proof of death.
Google's "Inactive Account Manager" allows you to set a plan in advance: designate who gets notified if your account is inactive for 3-18 months, and what happens to your data. You can authorize specific people to download specific data. This is the most proactive planning tool among major platforms.
Apple's "Digital Legacy" feature allows you to designate up to five Legacy Contacts who can request access to your Apple ID data after your death. They receive a Digital Legacy Key during your life to use for this purpose. Apple ID content (iCloud photos, documents, etc.) can then be accessed with a death certificate and the Legacy Key.
LinkedIn profiles can be removed by family members with a death certificate. There's no memorialization option.
Twitter allows family members to deactivate an account with proof of death. No memorialization.
Your email account may contain financial account logins, important correspondence, tax documents, and more. Access after death is challenging — email providers rarely give family members access without a court order, citing privacy and terms of service. Best practice:
Your executor needs to know about all online financial accounts:
Subscriptions that will continue to charge after death (Netflix, Spotify, Adobe, software subscriptions) should be cancelled promptly by the executor. These monthly charges can add up while an estate is being settled.
Policies vary significantly:
For large point balances, it's worth checking the specific program terms. Some programs allow designation of a beneficiary in advance — do this if the balance is significant.
The practical steps:
Not everything digital needs to be accessible to family after your death. Personal diaries, private messages, and digital content you'd prefer not to share are entirely legitimate to instruct should be deleted. You can leave specific instructions with a trusted person or in a letter of wishes accompanying your will.
KOHO offers a free account with no monthly fees and no minimum balance — easy to use and works anywhere in Canada. Use code 45ET55JSYA to get a small bonus when you sign up.
Open KOHO Free — No Fees — Code 45ET55JSYA