Skip to content
  • Home
  • Profile
  • Practice Areas
    • Corporate and Commercial
    • Intellectual Property
    • Real Estate, Banking and Finance
    • Dispute Resolution and Debt Recovery
    • Technology, Media and Telecommunications
  • Team
    • Lorna Mbatia
    • Roselyne Muyaga
    • Brenda Vilita
    • Emma Kyalo
    • Billy Wesonga
    • Jedidah Ngina
    • Setian Bundi
    • Patricia Muthoni
    • Monica Murage
    • Julie Atieno
  • Insights
  • Contact us
  • Home
  • Profile
  • Practice Areas
    • Corporate and Commercial
    • Intellectual Property
    • Real Estate, Banking and Finance
    • Dispute Resolution and Debt Recovery
    • Technology, Media and Telecommunications
  • Team
    • Lorna Mbatia
    • Roselyne Muyaga
    • Brenda Vilita
    • Emma Kyalo
    • Billy Wesonga
    • Jedidah Ngina
    • Setian Bundi
    • Patricia Muthoni
    • Monica Murage
    • Julie Atieno
  • Insights
  • Contact us

Insights

Digital Legacies: The next frontier of estate planning in Kenya.

For many Kenyans, digital assets such as social media accounts, cloud photo libraries, e-mail, domain names, online businesses, loyalty points, mobile-money wallets, and increasingly cryptocurrencies and tokens hold financial, sentimental or business value.

Yet, while land titles, bank accounts, and vehicles are routinely included in wills, few people consider including their digital assets in their estate plans. As digital finance and online entrepreneurship expand, the question of what happens to one’s digital assets after death has become one of the most pressing and least understood issues in estate planning today.

Why digital-asset planning matters in Kenya

  • Digital wealth is now mainstream.

Kenyans use mobile money (M-Pesa), online trading platforms and social media daily. Entrepreneurs equally run e-commerce stores and many individuals hold cryptocurrency or token investments. Without clear instructions, families can lose access to these assets or face long and costly legal processes trying to recover them.

  • Regulation is catching up.

The Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASP) Act seeks to regulate cryptocurrency exchanges and custodians, shaping how these platforms handle digital accounts when a user dies.

  • Succession law is still silent.

The Law of Succession Act and related statutes do not define “digital assets,” leaving administrators to navigate grey areas around ownership, access and privacy. In practice, families often face significant technical and legal hurdles to recover these assets.

Defining the modern estate: what counts as a digital asset?

A “digital asset” covers far more than cryptocurrency. In estate planning, it includes:

  • Financial assets: crypto, tokens, mobile wallets (e.g., M-Pesa business accounts) or online brokerage accounts.
  • Personal accounts: emails, social media, digital photos and subscriptions.
  • Online business assets: domain names, websites, intellectual property, e-commerce platforms.
  • Access tools: passwords, seed phrases, authentication apps or password managers.

These categories highlight how today’s estates are no longer purely physical as they extend into the cloud, across devices and over multiple digital jurisdictions.

Digital assets have turned ordinary estates into complex, cross-border and technical puzzles. The smart move is not to be techno-paranoid or techno-naïve but to remain practical, precise and proactive. This begins with integrating digital assets in every estate plan as it will safeguard not just wealth, but legacy. When it comes to your online world, the question is no longer if it matters  but whether your loved ones will be able to find it when you’re gone.

Should you require any further information, do contact us at info@cfllegal.com.

Contributor:

Julie Atieno
  • Careers
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy policy
  • Careers
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy policy

Share this page

Contact Information

Nairobi, Kenya

T: +254 20 444 0891/2

E: info@cfllegal.com

 

Physical address:

8th Floor, Sifa Towers,

Lenana Road, Kilimani,

Nairobi.

 

Postal address:

P.O Box 23555-00100,

Nairobi, Kenya

Kigali, Rwanda

T: +250 787 595 925

E: rwanda@cfllegal.com

 

Physical address:

2nd Floor, Ikaze House

KG 11 Av 10, Gisimenti

Kigali

 

Postal address:

P.O. Box 1639,

Kigali, Rwanda

Copyright © 2025 CFL Advocates All Rights Reserved

Join Our Mailing List

Subscribe
Powered by Tytantech

Subscribe to our mail list

Receive updates on new insights posted in real time.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies on our site to personalise content, to provide social media features, to analyse our traffic and to enhance your user experience. By using our site, you agree to our use of cookies.

Read more about it here.

ACCEPT & CLOSE