Are you worrying about what will happen to your crypto once you are gone?
Well, this is where estate planning and will planning becomes helpful. And now that crypto is going mainstream, a lot of people have moved on from keeping wealth in gold lockers to holding it on a regulated crypto exchange like Binance — or even on a lending platform like Aave, which is a decentralized lending platform, or Nexo, which is a centralized lending and borrowing platform (a little riskier, but again, investors based on their risk profile are picking the platforms to maximize their crypto returns).
People understand there is always risk involved. But as crypto becomes more and more mainstream, that risk factor keeps getting smaller.
Today, we are going to look into how you can use Binance’s Inheritance feature, which was launched in June 2025. This is one of those features not a lot of people are aware of — and as a CoinSutra reader, we would definitely like you to know about it and use it. That is exactly what we are going to guide you through today.
Also, just so you know: Binance recently launched a feature for buying and selling US stocks and ETFs (rolled out on June 1, 2026), with tokenized “bStocks” on the way. I think after this, the Inheritance feature will be used more and more — because passing assets to a nominee or heir is a very common, expected feature in the traditional stock and ETF world. Crypto is simply catching up.
Let’s get into it.
Here is the part most articles get wrong, so I want to be very clear with you.
Binance does not give you a traditional “nominee” or “beneficiary” box where you pre-name a person and a percentage — the way you would with a bank account or a brokerage account. I know that is what most of us expect, but that is not how Binance works today.
Instead, Binance uses a two-part system:
So the honest summary is: there is no pre-set beneficiary designation. There is an emergency contact + a documented claim process. Binance’s own support team confirms this — the system is built around an Emergency Contact and Inheritance Claim flow, not a beneficiary/nominee designation like a bank or brokerage account.
Binance founder Changpeng Zhao (CZ) has publicly pushed for a proper “will function” across all crypto platforms, where assets could one day be split among named people by percentage. That is the vision — but keep in mind the live feature today is the emergency-contact-and-claim model described above, not a percentage-allocation engine.
This is the part you do today, for your own peace of mind. It takes about five minutes, and you can update it any time.
Here are the steps (on the Binance app):


Once you have added your emergency contact details like Name, Email and phone number. Next is to set the time which would be consider as inactive for your account.

That’s it. You have now told Binance who matters most to you, so that if your account ever goes inactive for an extended period, the right person can be alerted and step in.
Tip: Choose someone you fully trust, and ideally someone who actually knows you hold crypto. One of the biggest real-world problems is that families don’t even know the crypto exists. A five-minute conversation with your nominee solves half the problem. If you haven’t already, also make sure your account is locked down properly — here’s my Binance 2FA / Google Authenticator setup guide and my guide to protecting crypto from hackers.
This is the part your loved one will use later — but it’s worth understanding now so you can guide them, or so you can use it yourself for a family member’s account.
Important: the claim is not made from the deceased person’s account. The claimant uses their own Binance account.
Here are the steps:

You can also access the official Binance walkthrough here: Binance’s “Inheritance Appeal” support article.
A lot of you keep crypto in more than one place, so here’s how the three most common setups handle inheritance. The big-picture takeaway: all three need you to plan in advance — the only thing that changes is where the bottleneck sits (a document review, a probate court, or simply who has your keys).
| Binance | Coinbase | Self-Custody (Ledger) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Custody type | Custodial (Binance holds your assets) | Custodial (Coinbase holds your assets) | You alone hold the keys / seed phrase |
| Pre-named beneficiary? | No — Emergency Contact + claim | No — no in-app beneficiary | No built-in inheritance feature |
| Claim / transfer process | Heir opens own account, files Legacy Inheritance appeal | Heir/executor uses Coinbase’s estate (Executor) process | Heir must obtain the seed phrase/keys, or use multisig / a third-party tool |
| Documents needed | Death certificate, ID, proof of relationship + deceased’s email/phone/Binance ID | Certified death certificate + probate documents + ID | None legally — it’s purely a technical access problem |
| Typical timeline | ~1–2 months (longer if complex) | Tied to probate — months to over a year | Instant if heirs have the keys; permanent loss if not |
| Biggest risk | Heir must know the account exists | Full probate burden, no shortcut | Lost keys = lost forever; phishing risk on heirs |
| Best for | Custodial users who want a structured handoff + inactivity alert | Users already doing traditional estate/probate planning | Sovereignty-focused holders willing to plan carefully |
A couple of honest notes:
If you’re holding long-term in cold storage, read my guides on the best hardware wallets and how to store your private keys securely — because for self-custody, the keys are the inheritance. And if you haven’t yet decided where to hold your crypto, check out our best cryptocurrency exchanges guide and our roundup of the best multi-cryptocurrency wallets.
Since a big chunk of the CoinSutra community is based in the UAE, this section is for you. Crypto inheritance in the UAE works very differently from most other countries, so it’s worth getting right.
In the UAE, inheritance is split into two tracks:
If you’re a non-Muslim resident, you have a few solid options:
Here’s the genuinely exciting part. In October 2024, the DIFC Courts launched a purpose-built Digital Assets Will — designed specifically for crypto and digital assets.
What makes it different:
So yes — crypto can be explicitly included in a UAE will, and the DIFC Digital Assets Will is the most advanced route available right now.
A lot of people assume Dubai’s crypto regulator, VARA (Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority), handles inheritance. It doesn’t. VARA licenses and supervises crypto businesses (exchanges, custodians, brokers) — but crypto inheritance is handled by the courts and wills registries (DIFC Courts, ADGM, ADJD), not VARA.
Don’t rely on any single tool. Stack all three:
This UAE section is general information, not legal advice. UAE inheritance law is detailed and evolving — please confirm the current DIFC Courts fees and process and speak to a UAE-qualified estate lawyer before finalizing anything.
I always like to keep it real with you, so here are the honest limitations:
For years, “what happens to my crypto if I die?” was a scary, unanswered question. Self-custody is powerful, but if your keys are lost, the coins are gone forever.
Binance building this directly into the platform is a genuinely big deal — it brings crypto a step closer to how banks, stocks, and ETFs already handle nominees. It’s not a full beneficiary system yet, and it won’t replace good old-fashioned estate planning. But as a CoinSutra reader, you now have a simple, free safety net that most people don’t even know exists.
Set up your emergency contact today. It takes five minutes, and it’s one of those things you’ll never regret doing. And if you’re in the UAE, take the extra step and look into a DIFC Digital Assets Will.
When in doubt, just send me a tweet @coinsutra and I’ll do my best to guide you. And if you found this helpful, do share it with a friend or family member who holds crypto — this is exactly the kind of thing people put off until it’s too late.
Not in the traditional sense. Binance does not offer a pre-named beneficiary/nominee designation like a bank or brokerage. Instead it uses an Emergency Contact setup (done while you’re alive) plus a separate Inheritance Appeal / Legacy Inheritance claim process (done by your heir after your passing).
Launched in June 2025, it lets you nominate an emergency contact and set an inactivity trigger, while your heirs can later file an inheritance claim to receive your assets after your death.
Yes, setting up your emergency contact on Binance is a free, built-in account feature.
After the heir submits a valid claim with the required documents, Binance typically transfers the assets within 1–2 months. Complex cases can take longer.
No. The heir must use their own Binance account to submit the Inheritance Appeal, not the deceased person’s account.
No. It handles the platform-level transfer on Binance but does not override your country’s inheritance laws. Use it alongside a proper will or estate plan.
On the Binance app: tap your avatar/Profile → Account Security → Emergency Contacts → add details and verify → Save.
Help & Support → Self Service → Legacy Inheritance (“Claim deceased user’s assets”).
Yes. Non-Muslim residents can register a DIFC Will (including the dedicated DIFC Digital Assets Will, launched October 2024) or an ADGM/ADJD will to direct their crypto to chosen beneficiaries and opt out of default Sharia distribution.
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CoinSutra provides general cryptocurrency and blockchain information for educational purposes only. Content on CoinSutra’s website and social media is not financial, investment, trading, or professional advice. Readers should conduct independent research and consult a licensed advisor before making investment decisions. CoinSutra does not recommend or endorse specific cryptocurrencies, projects, platforms, products, exchanges, wallets, or other offerings.
How To Use Binance Inheritance (Nominee) Feature- Guide (2026) was published on CoinSutra - Bitcoin Community
