Kurt Supe, CPA & Retirement Planner Profile picture
Mar 31 8 tweets 4 min read Read on X
A 71 year old man dies in March.

Will. Trust. Beneficiaries on every account. He did everything right.

BUT he kept his entire life on his IPHONE.

Banking apps. Brokerage accounts. Crypto wallets. PayPal. Venmo. Credit cards. Passwords. Financial records going back many years.

And every photo he ever took. His grandkids. His anniversaries. Years of family memories that exist nowhere else.

His wife found a passcode scribbled on a piece of paper in his desk drawer.

It didn't work.

She tried everything. Nothing worked.

What followed was months of frustration and thousands in legal fees recovering accounts and memories that were never hidden from her.

A perfect estate plan on paper.

Zero estate plan for his phone.

Nobody ever told him his smartphone needed one too.

Here's the free two minute fix that could have saved her all of that. 🧵
Apple built a feature specifically for this problem.

It is called a Legacy Contact.

It lets one person you trust request access to your Apple account after you die.

Your photos. Your messages. Your notes. Your files. Your backups. Everything stored in iCloud.

It does not require your password. It does not require a court order. It does not require an attorney.

It requires two minutes of your time right now.

Open Settings. Tap your name at the top. Tap Sign-In and Security. Tap Legacy Contact. Choose someone you trust completely.

Send them the Access Key. Print a copy and put it with your estate documents.

That is it. Free. Built into your phone. Already waiting for you to use it.
One thing most people miss.

Your Legacy Contact needs two things to actually access your account.

The Access Key you created.

And a certified copy of your death certificate.

They submit both at digital-legacy.apple.com.

Without the Access Key the process becomes a legal fight with Apple that most families lose.

Do not store that key only on your phone.

Print it. Put it with your will. Tell your executor exactly where it is.
If you use a password manager your family needs more than the master password.

They need to know it exists.

They need to know which device it lives on.

They need to know how to open it.

Most families discover a password manager six months after the estate closes.

After the accounts are already gone.

Write down three things. What password manager you use. Where to find it. What the master password is.

Seal it in an envelope. Give it to your executor today.
This one has no second chances.

A bank password resets.

A crypto seed phrase does not.

If your family does not have your 12 or 24 word seed phrase the money is mathematically unreachable. Forever.

No court order fixes it. No attorney fixes it. No customer service line fixes it.

Write the seed phrase down. Store it somewhere fireproof. Tell someone exactly where that is.

This is the one mistake your family can never recover from.
PayPal. Venmo. Cash App.

These are not banks. They are not covered by your estate the way a brokerage account is.

The balance can disappear into a claims process your family does not know how to navigate.

Make a simple list. Every financial app on your phone. The login. The approximate balance.

Seal it in an envelope. Give it to your executor.

Update it once a year.

One hour of your time now saves your family months of frustration later.
Your Apple plan covers half your digital life.

Google covers the other half.

Gmail. Drive. Photos. YouTube. Every document you have ever saved to the cloud.

Google built something called an Inactive Account Manager.

It lets you choose someone to access all of it after you are gone.

Go to myaccount.google.com. Search Inactive Account Manager. Set it up in five minutes.

Most people have used Google for twenty years and have never opened that setting once.
You have a will. A trust. Beneficiaries on every account.

You did the hard part.

Now do the easy part.

Apple Legacy Contact. Password inventory. Crypto seed phrase in a fireproof safe. Financial app list in a sealed envelope. Google Inactive Account Manager.

Your attorney handles what the courts touch.

Nobody handles what lives inside that phone unless you do it yourself.

Do this today. Not this weekend. Today.

What is one thing on your phone right now that your family would never find without you?

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More from @KurtSupeCPA

Dec 29, 2025
I reviewed a retirement plan with $2.8 million saved.

Then I reviewed one with $740,000.

Guess which one will run out of money first?

The $2.8 million.

After 25 years doing this, I've learned something most advisors miss:

Net worth doesn’t always decide who runs out of money in retirement. 🧵

These 4 retiree types do: 👇

One of these 4 types can retire on HALF what everyone else needs—I'll reveal which at the end:
TYPE 1: The Pension Owner

A $2,500/month pension = $600,000 portfolio.

Except it's BETTER than $600K in stocks because it never goes down, never needs rebalancing, and doesn't run out.

My clients with pensions undervalue this advantage.
Those without? They get it immediately.
TYPE 2: The Low Spender

Mark retired from the teaching at 64.

$5,200/month income guaranteed income

$550,000 saved in retirement funds

Paid-off condo

Built a life on $5000/month—golf, volunteering, grandkids.

His friends made TWICE as much and felt broke the whole time.

What was his secret?

Wealth isn't what you earn or what you have.

It's the gap between what you have and what you need.

Most people say they need $100K minimum to live modestly.

Low Spenders live RICHLY on $50-60K.

That's a $1,000,000 + difference over retirement.
Read 6 tweets
Aug 20, 2025
Kurt Vonnegut once told this story about his friend Joseph Heller—the author of Catch-22, one of the best-selling novels of the 20th century.

At a billionaire’s party, Vonnegut said:

“This hedge fund manager made more in one day than you made from Catch-22 in your entire life.”

Heller smiled:

“Maybe. But I have something he’ll never have… enough.”

That’s the secret to retirement. Let’s unpack it 🧵
That line is the core of retirement.

“Enough” isn’t a dollar target.

It’s funded contentment—money organized to support the life you actually want, not an ever-moving scoreboard.
Step 1 — Define your life goals before touching numbers.

People and experiences that matter

Non-negotiables (health, home, community, travel, giving)

What you’d regret not doing in the next 10 years
Read 8 tweets

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