What BlockWill Protects
BlockWill records, protects and transfers 16 classes of asset across four worlds: physical, financial, digital, and personal and legacy. From the home and the gold to the demat account and the company; from the crypto wallet and the phone number to the passport, the trust deed and the family recipe. If it has value to you, financial, legal, or purely sentimental, it has a place in BlockWill.
Not just crypto. Not just what a bank can see. Everything.
$84 Trillion
In wealth will change hands through 2045, the largest transfer in history.
$200 Billion+
In financial assets already sits unclaimed worldwide because heirs never knew it existed.
$121 Billion
In Bitcoin is locked forever in the wallets of people who died without sharing access.
55%
Of adults have no estate plan at all, leaving families to reconstruct a lifetime from memory.
World 1
The assets you can hold, and the proof of ownership that goes missing first.
The home everyone knows about, and the title nobody can find.
What it includes. Homes and commercial buildings, agricultural and industrial land, leases and licences, development rights, and mining, subsurface and surface rights.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
A house can't be hidden, but the proof of owning it can vanish. Heirs know the flat exists yet can't locate the registered deed, don't realise it's held through a holding company, or discover an unpaid mortgage and a co-owner with rival claims. Cross-border property freezes for years in foreign probate; in forced-heirship jurisdictions the law may split it against your wishes. The asset is in plain sight, the path to inheriting it is not.
Where a regular will falls short
A will says “my property” but rarely carries the survey number, the encumbrance status, the holding-company layer, or the location of the original deed, and it becomes public during probate, advertising exactly what you own and where. It also can't keep pace as you refinance, lease or buy across borders.
The gold in the locker, the watch on the wrist, the art on the wall, and no record of any of it.
What it includes. Vehicles; gold, bullion, coins and jewellery; and collectibles and valuables: artwork, antiques, watches, rare books, wine, instruments, handbags and memorabilia.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
Tangible valuables are the easiest to lose and the hardest to prove. Jewellery quietly disappears; an heirloom is claimed by the wrong relative; a painting's value collapses because its provenance chain is broken. Without an appraised record and a known location, families can neither find these items nor prove they owned them, and the fight over “who gets grandmother's ring” fractures families faster than money ever does.
Where a regular will falls short
Wills bundle movables into vague “personal effects”: no inventory, no appraisal, no provenance, no location. So the most emotionally charged assets become the most contested, and the easiest to walk out the door before anyone notices.
The cash only you knew about, in the place only you remember.
What it includes. Physical cash and where it is stored: home safes, bank lockers and foreign-currency holdings.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
Undocumented cash simply evaporates: found by the wrong person, thrown out with old papers, or trapped behind a safe no one can open. Worse, undeclared cash can hand grieving heirs a tax investigation they never saw coming.
Where a regular will falls short
A will can't sensibly itemise fluctuating cash or name its hiding place without becoming a public treasure map. Cash is the asset wills handle worst, and the one most often lost entirely.
World 2
A lifetime of saving and building, scattered across institutions and entities.
Dozens of accounts, one lifetime of saving, and a family left guessing where it all is.
What it includes. Bank accounts, demat and trading accounts, mutual funds and SIPs, insurance policies, pension and retirement funds, lockers, and money owed to you.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
This is where the world's lost wealth piles up: over $200 billion sits dormant precisely because heirs never knew the accounts existed. A nominee is not an owner; a missing beneficiary designation sends a policy into limbo; a forgotten SIP or pension keeps drawing from an account nobody monitors. The money is real, lawful and waiting, and unreachable.
Where a regular will falls short
A will doesn't list live account numbers, nominees or the login reality, and it can't be re-signed every time you open or close an account. By the time probate concludes, statements have changed, institutions demand court orders, and the trail has gone cold.
You built the company. Will it survive the week after you?
What it includes. Ownership and shareholdings across sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLPs, private and public companies, OPCs, HUFs, trusts, NGOs, CSOs and startups.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
A business is a living thing that doesn't pause for grief. Without documented ownership, signing authority and a continuity plan, payroll stops, bank mandates freeze, partners trigger buy-sell clauses, and a thriving company can be hollowed out in a control vacuum. Key-person death is the exact moment competitors and co-owners move.
Where a regular will falls short
Wills transfer shares but not control: they don't encode shareholder agreements, signing authority, or the operational keys a successor needs on day one, and probate delay is fatal to a business that needs decisions tomorrow.
Your ideas keep earning after you're gone, if anyone knows they exist.
What it includes. Patents, trademarks, copyrights, designs and geographical indications, software and source code, trade secrets, and the royalty and licensing income they generate.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
IP dies of neglect. A single missed renewal lets a patent or trademark lapse into the public domain; royalty streams keep flowing to a closed account; a trade secret with no documented holder simply stops being protectable. Heirs can inherit a goldmine and never know to collect from it.
Where a regular will falls short
Wills rarely catalogue intangible assets, their renewal calendars, or where the income lands, so the rights quietly expire and the royalties are never claimed.
World 3
The accounts, keys and the one phone that now unlocks everything else.
The one asset class where a forgotten phrase means it's gone forever.
What it includes. Crypto held in hot, cold, custodial and multi-sig wallets, plus tokens, NFTs, staking positions, DeFi holdings and smart contracts.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
Crypto is unforgiving in a way no other asset is. There is no bank to call, no court that can reset a key. An estimated $121 billion in Bitcoin is already locked forever in the wallets of people who died without passing on their seed phrase. Heirs may stare at the balance and never touch a cent. And a seed phrase scribbled on paper in a drawer is one fire, flood or curious visitor away from total loss.
Where a regular will falls short
You can never write a seed phrase or private key into a will: it becomes public record in probate, an open invitation to theft. Yet without it, the asset is permanently unreachable. A will is structurally incapable of safely transferring crypto. This is the gap BlockWill was built to close.
A monetised channel, a domain, a decade of photos, governed by terms you never read.
What it includes. Email and social accounts, cloud storage, e-commerce and payment accounts, subscriptions, gaming assets, monetised creator / freelance accounts, and domain names and web hosting.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
Online platforms don't recognise heirs, they enforce their own policies. Accounts are memorialised or deleted, monetised channels stop paying, domains lapse and are bought out from under the family, and a lifetime of photos sits locked behind a password no one has. Without access and explicit instructions, your digital life is governed by a terms-of-service document, not by your wishes.
Where a regular will falls short
Wills have no mechanism to grant platform access or direct memorialisation, and listing credentials in a public document is both unsafe and instantly outdated. Platforms simply won't act on a will the way they act on documented access.
Lose the phone and the number, and you've locked the family out of everything else.
What it includes. The phone device itself and the number / line: the single point that now controls access to almost every other account you own.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
The phone is the master key to the modern estate: the second factor for the bank, the email, the crypto exchange, even government portals. When the device locks and the carrier cancels the number, every two-factor login it guarded falls like dominoes, and heirs are shut out of accounts they have every legal right to. Reclaiming a cancelled number can be impossible, and a SIM-swap on an unprotected line is a thief's easiest way in.
Where a regular will falls short
No will accounts for a device PIN, a carrier security code, or which accounts depend on a phone number to authenticate, yet without these, every other instruction in the will is unreachable in practice.
World 4
Identity, intent, and the memories that never appear on a balance sheet.
The documents that prove who you are, and that your family will need to prove it too.
What it includes. Government IDs and passports, nationality, birth and marriage certificates, driving and professional licences, educational records, tax returns, medical records, healthcare directives, organ-donor wishes, and legal documents such as powers of attorney and trust deeds.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
Identity documents are the keys that unlock every claim, and the hardest to replace once the person is gone. Families can't close accounts, file final taxes, claim insurance or even arrange a funeral without IDs they can't find. A living will left undiscovered means medical decisions are made against your wishes. Lost originals mean months of bureaucratic limbo at the worst possible time.
Where a regular will falls short
A will assumes these documents can be found; it doesn't store them, track their expiry, or carry an advance healthcare directive, which is needed long before any will is ever read.
You wrote the will. Can anyone find it, prove it, and trust it's the latest one?
What it includes. Trust deeds and will documents, with the people and conditions around them: trustees, executors, beneficiaries, guardians, witnesses, codicils and letters of wishes.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
A will that can't be found is no will at all, and a later version that never surfaces means an outdated one governs your estate. Lost or contested originals trigger intestacy: the exact chaos the will was meant to prevent. Cross-border families face the added trap of conflicting laws and forced-heirship rules deciding for them.
Where a regular will falls short
Here, the will itself is the point of failure: paper is lost, forged or quietly superseded. Securing it in BlockWill with a Certificate of Immutability proves which version is authentic, where the original sits, and that it hasn't been tampered with, the safeguards a will can't give itself.
The lawyer, the banker, the partner, the people who hold the other half of the story.
What it includes. The trusted advisors and people your family will need to reach: lawyers, accountants, bankers, business partners and doctors.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
Half of what you know lives in relationships, not documents. Without a contact map, heirs don't know who held the keys: which lawyer drafted the deed, which banker knew the accounts, which partner owns the other half of the business, and critical knowledge dies with the connection.
Where a regular will falls short
Wills don't carry a directory of the people who can actually help execute them, leaving families to rebuild a network from scratch under pressure.
They can't ask where you went. Make sure someone is ready to care for them.
What it includes. Pets and livestock and their care: dogs, cats, horses, birds, exotic animals and farm animals.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
A pet is a dependent, not a possession. In the confusion after a death, animals are too often surrendered to shelters or left without the routines and medications they rely on, because no one knew the vet, the diet, or who had agreed to take them in.
Where a regular will falls short
Wills are slow and clumsy for a living creature that needs care today; a named, pre-confirmed caretaker and a funded plan act immediately, where a will cannot.
The last words you'd want them to have, delivered exactly when they need them.
What it includes. Personal messages, letters and instructions you want delivered to specific people, at a moment you choose.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
Some things can only be said once. Without a delivery mechanism, the message you meant for a child's wedding or a partner's hardest day is never sent: the comfort, the apology, the blessing simply never arrives.
Where a regular will falls short
A will is a legal instrument read once in a lawyer's office. It's no place for a private letter timed to a future moment, and it offers no way to deliver it when it will matter most.
The recipes, the stories, the voice notes, the wealth that isn't on any balance sheet.
What it includes. Photos and video, letters and writing, cultural and family traditions, recipes, and the milestones worth preserving.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
The first wealth a family actually loses is its memory. Photos trapped in a locked cloud, a grandmother's recipe never written down, a tradition no one remembers the origin of, these vanish quietly and completely. Unlike money, they can never be recovered or replaced.
Where a regular will falls short
Wills deal in assets, not in meaning. There is simply no place in a legal document for the stories, images and traditions that are often what a family most wishes had been preserved.
If it matters to you, it belongs in the plan, even if it fits no category.
What it includes. Anything valuable, financially or sentimentally, that doesn't fit a standard category.
What we record to make succession meaningful
Without a plan
The unusual asset is the one most likely to be overlooked, precisely because nothing prompts anyone to look for it. If only you know it exists, it disappears with you.
Where a regular will falls short
Standard wills work from standard categories; the idiosyncratic asset falls through the cracks of a template. BlockWill gives it a home.
Not a will sitting in a drawer. Not a password list a fire could erase. A living, encrypted record of everything you own, mapped to the people you choose, released only when it should be, provable beyond dispute. That is the difference between leaving wealth and leaving a puzzle.
$2 trillion in unclaimed wealth has already been lost to poor planning. $124 trillion more will transfer across the globe in the coming years.
The question isn't whether your clients need succession planning, it's whether you'll be the one who provides it.
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BlockWill Analytical Technologies Limited
Level 2, Innovation One, DIFC, Dubai, UAE