Inherita stores your crypto keys, passwords and vital documents, then releases them to the right people when your proof of life monitor activates. No lawyers. No paperwork
Get Started See How It WorksWhile you’re active, nothing is sent. If you go quiet beyond a grace period you set, the switch arms and—after a short response window—releases begin.
Demo: counting down 24 hours in 24 seconds…
Hannah was solo hiking the AT when her pack (and power bank) were stolen at a shelter. Overnight, her phone died. Upon waking, she had no means to reach anyone. Inherita had already logged a recent exit, plus a short Rescue Note: shelter names, the route she planned to take, and who to call.
When her 24-hour timer passed, two contacts received the note. A ranger checked the closest overnights along her stated direction and found her within hours. A possibly emergency situation averted. That’s the whole point: fast, practical information to the right contacts, at the right time, minimizing risk for our customers and their contacts.
One letter that removes uncertainty—funeral preferences, final messages, .
Private keys, or location instructions for a hardware wallet. It is your choice; maybe consider both for risk mitigation.
Allergies, meds, insurance card photos, emergency contacts—private until needed.
Storing a seed phrase “somewhere safe” sounds easy—until life gets messy. A drawer note can be photographed. A bank safe can be missed or drilled by the wrong executor. And leaving the secret with a law firm turns your private asset into someone else’s custody risk. The moment a whole secret sits in any one place, it’s vulnerable—today or years from now.
Splitting the phrase across relatives? People travel, move, forget, pass away, or take phone photos. Hardware wallets locked in safes? Great—if your contacts can find the safe, know the combination, and can piece together which wallet, which derivation path, and the recovery steps. Password managers with “emergency access”? Convenient, but they flatten everything into one unlock, and your secrets shift to a third-party policy.
Attorneys are excellent at probate, not operational security custody. Their systems weren’t built to guard live secrets for a decade. Staff turns over; offices move; mergers happen. A sealed envelope can be duplicated, mislabeled, or opened under edge case instructions. It’s not bad faith—just the wrong tool for a world of screenshots and cloud sync.
Inherita lets you give your future contacts enough to succeed without handing them your secret today. You assign: where the metal plate is, which wallet brand/version, recovery hints, order of operations, and who to call for help. The sensitive material (the key) stays wherever you choose offline, or online, it's your call.
Notes are encrypted on your device with AES-256-GCM. Each beneficiary gets their own wrap, so they can only unlock what you assigned to them. We never see your unencrypted content, and nothing is released until the timer plus response window expires. If you come back online, the switch quietly resets to greenlight.
Instead of betting everything on a safe, a lawyer, or someone’s memory, you’re giving your contacts the right information at the right time—without increasing your exposure today. That’s how a private asset remains private, and still ends up where you intended.
We’ve had security for places and things for decades: house alarms, car alarms, vaults. But our phones became our real hub for daily life: identity, money, plans, routes, memories. With that shift, the obvious next step is an alarm for a person’s well-being and continuity.
Inherita is that evolution: a state-of-the-art proof-of-life monitor. While you’re active, it stays silent. If you go quiet beyond a short grace period you set, it behaves like an alarm system—first a gentle check to your chosen contacts, then (after your response email window) the secure release of the instructions and information you prepared in advance.
Alarms are about safety and aftermath. Inherita does both: it can help you be found faster in ordinary mishaps, and if something serious happens, it handles the practical side of legacy by guiding the trusted contacts you named. Each receives only what you assigned to them.
Examples of what people store (demo only—no real data).
Public: bc1q…9skh · Private: **** **** **** · Wallet: Sparrow v1.8 · Plate in closet safe.
Simple service, something you should know I never told you before...
Front: 2741 · Garage: 1180 · HOA gate card in glove box; spare key at Sam’s.
Charlie (Labrador) meds: Rimadyl 75mg; vet: Harbor Animal (555-0199); sitter: Jorge.
Bank of Oceanview #1175. Key taped under desk drawer. Box holds passports & titles.
iCloud recovery steps; registrar: Namecheap; DNS notes; shared Netflix plan owner.
I sleep better knowing my spouse can unlock everything if something happens.
Took minutes to set up. Way simpler than my DIY “crypto will.”
Rescue Mode is perfect for solo trekking—my mom gets what matters.