Online accounts after death: Navigating Platform Policies
This term refers to the legal and technical status of user accounts—including Email, Shopping, Streaming, and Social Media—once the account owner passes away. The fate of these accounts is rarely uniform; depending on the platform’s specific terms of service and the owner’s inactivity, accounts may be frozen, deleted, or remain active indefinitely.
Why it matters: In our digital age, an unmanaged account is more than just a „ghost“ profile. It represents a significant risk:
- Security & Fraud: Abandoned accounts are primary targets for hackers and identity thieves, who can use them to send spam or access sensitive personal information.
- Financial Impact: Ongoing subscriptions (Streaming, Cloud storage, Apps) can continue to incur costs if the payment method remains active, draining the estate’s resources.
- Emotional Burden: For the bereaved, seeing „birthday reminders“ or active profiles of a deceased loved one can be distressing if they lack the credentials to manage or memorialize the account.
Global Platform Approaches: Different tech giants have different solutions for online accounts after death. For example, Google offers the Inactive Account Manager, while Meta (Facebook/Instagram) allows for Memorialization or permanent deletion.
Conclusion: Taking control of your online accounts after death is a vital part of modern legacy planning. By identifying which platforms you use and setting up their built-in legacy features today, you prevent financial loss and protect your digital privacy for the future. ➜ Digital Legacy