This article is for US-based crypto holders using a hardware wallet who want a clear, practical plan for taxes, estate, and inheritance. Beginners will get simple, actionable steps. More advanced holders will find worked examples for multisig and Shamir backup (SLIP-39). What I've found over years of testing is that sensible planning saves months of headache later. And it can keep your heirs from making costly mistakes.
Your seed phrase controls private keys. Short sentence. Lose the seed phrase, and recovery options drop to almost zero. Pass away without instructions, and your heirs may be locked out even if the coins are still on-chain. Who will get access if you die? (This is not automatic.)
Plan for three problems: legal access, technical recovery, and tax reporting. All three need separate but linked solutions: legal paperwork that authorizes a trusted party; a backup approach your heirs can use; and transaction records so taxes are handled correctly.
See also: seed phrase management and passphrase (25th word).
In the US crypto is treated as property by the IRS. That means capital gains rules apply. In many cases inherited assets receive a step-up in cost basis to fair market value at date of death — but tax law changes and interpretations do too. So you should:
I suggest storing CSV exports and a short readme in encrypted cloud storage and noting where the decryption key is stored (not the seed phrase itself). Consult a tax professional for specifics. But simple bookkeeping now avoids painful tax reconstructions later.
Start small. Most people need a solution that an executor or spouse can use without advanced crypto knowledge. Here's a basic path:
But don't put the exact seed phrase in a will. Why? Wills are often filed into the public record during probate (so anyone could see it).
For more on backups and passphrases, see seed-phrase-management and passphrase-25th-word.
If you hold significant amounts or want stronger protection, consider more advanced options.
Shamir backup (SLIP-39)
Multisig setups
Trusts and legal constructs
Progressive example (increasing complexity):
Short answer: your funds remain on-chain; the seed phrase still controls the private keys. Long answer: problems happen if proprietary firmware or a closed ecosystem becomes unsupported.
But there are practical points to consider:
Store clear instructions for alternative recovery paths (derived key tools, recommended third-party wallets). Link those instructions and keep them updated.
For supply-chain concerns and buying safely, see fake-supply-chain-security and where-to-buy.
| Method | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Paper backup | Cheap, easy | Fragile; fire/water damage |
| Metal plate | Durable, fireproof | Cost; requires secure storage |
| Shamir shares (SLIP-39) | Flexible threshold; geographic split | More complex to manage |
| Safe deposit box | Strong physical security | Access rules vary by bank; probate issues |
| Lawyer/trust escrow | Legal authority; convenience | Trust cost; centralization risk |
Q: Can my heirs recover crypto if the device breaks?
A: Yes — if they have the correct seed phrase and passphrase. Devices can fail, but the seed phrase is the ultimate recovery key. See restore-recover-wallet.
Q: What happens if the company goes bankrupt?
A: Your coins remain on the blockchain. You may need alternative tools if official support ends. See the earlier section and lost-device-company-bankrupt.
Q: Is Bluetooth safe for inheritance planning?
A: Bluetooth is a convenience for daily use. For inheritance, rely on the seed phrase and physical backups — not Bluetooth connections. For connectivity security, see usb-otg-bluetooth.
Plan early. Small, clear steps prevent larger problems later. If you have under a modest amount of crypto and one trusted person, a metal backup and a clear executor instruction will usually be enough. If you run a larger portfolio, consider SLIP-39 or multisig plus a trust.
Ready to put a plan in place? Start with the practical guides linked here: seed-phrase-management, multisig-setup, and cold-storage-strategies. If you need legal certainty, consult an estate attorney with crypto experience.
(If you want, test your recovery plan with a small transfer first — practice makes the real thing smoother.)