Think about the most important things you'd want your family to find if something happened to you tomorrow. Not your Netflix login — the things that genuinely matter. Where the will is. The combination to the safe. The policy nobody knows about. The passcode to the phone with twenty years of photos on it.
Now notice something: almost none of those are passwords you use every day. They're codes, locations, and pointers — and most of them are useless without a physical thing you keep at home.
The combination, not the safe
That's the whole idea behind Testamently. You don't hand us the safe — you keep that. You leave the combination. You don't upload your phone; you leave the passcode and where the phone is. You don't store your crypto seed phrase; you store the wallet's PIN and that it's in the home safe.
Each record is one half of a lock. We hold that half. The other half — the safe, the phone, the wallet — never leaves your home. Apart, they're harmless. Together, in the hands of the right person at the right moment, they're everything.
Why this is safer than a password manager
A password manager is built to give you live access every day, which means it has to hold the whole key. Testamently is the opposite. Because we only ever keep the half that does nothing on its own, a breach of our servers reveals nothing usable. Security isn't a feature we bolted on — it's the shape of the thing.
Not a will — but it points to yours
Testamently doesn't replace your legal will, and it doesn't try to. It holds the practical half a will often leaves out: where the original is, who the solicitor is, what exists and where. You keep the lawyer. We make sure your family can find them.
Set it up once, choose who receives each record, and check in now and then. Nothing is shared while you're here. If your check-ins ever stop, the people you chose get exactly what you left them — never a moment before.