For Families

Your family should not have to search, guess, or piece things together.

Local Legacy Vault helps you privately organize the specific contacts, instructions, household details, wishes, and first-step guidance your loved ones may need during an emergency, serious illness, or after you're gone.

Stored locally No cloud vault Private by design No subscription required
Family Guidance Private Vault
Who to call first Trusted contacts and first steps
Where to look Documents, accounts, and access notes
What matters most Household, care, and family guidance
What not to rush Calm reminders during stressful moments

The Reality

Most families are not left with nothing.
They are left with pieces.

Without clear guidance
  • Documents are in different places
  • Passwords, accounts, and access notes are scattered
  • No one knows who to call first
  • Household details live in someone's memory
  • Pets, dependents, and routines are unclear
  • Family members make decisions under stress
With Local Legacy Vault
  • Important details are organized in one private place
  • Contacts and first steps are easier to follow
  • Family guidance is printable and clear
  • Household, care, and access notes are documented
  • Executor information is easier to locate
  • Loved ones feel supported instead of left guessing

What They Receive

A clear place to begin when emotions are already heavy.

Your family may not need more documents. They may need direction — who to call, where to look, what matters first, what can wait, and what you specifically wanted them to know.

Local Legacy Vault helps turn your private information into practical Family and Executor Guides your loved ones can follow.

Family Guide

For the people closest to you

  • Who to contact first
  • Where important things are located
  • Household, pet, and care instructions
  • Personal wishes and family notes

Executor Guide

For the person handling responsibilities

  • Important contacts and responsibilities
  • Financial and insurance references
  • Legal document locations
  • Property, asset, and follow-through notes
Contact this person first
Your executor or primary contact
The person your family should notify first
Your attorney or financial advisor
For legal and financial guidance
What needs attention soon
Notify family members Contact funeral provider Secure the property Locate important documents
What should not be rushed
Close bank accounts Distribute belongings Move large funds Cancel subscriptions

First 72 Hours

The first few days are when your family needs the clearest direction.

After an emergency or death, loved ones are often trying to make decisions while grieving, searching, calling, and guessing. Local Legacy Vault helps you prepare the first guidance they may need before they are forced to figure it out alone.

Preview the First 72 Hours Guide

A calm starting point when everything feels urgent.

Who This Helps

Guidance for the people who will need it most.

Adult Children
Less searching. Fewer unanswered questions.
Give your children a clear place to begin instead of leaving them to sort through drawers, files, emails, passwords, and memory.
Spouses and Partners
A calmer handoff during a hard moment.
Help the person closest to you understand what matters, where to look, who to contact, and what should not be rushed.
Executors
A clearer starting point for responsibilities.
Give your executor organized references for contacts, documents, accounts, property, insurance, and next steps.

What Gets Organized

The practical details your family may need, in one private place.

Not every important detail belongs in a legal document. Local Legacy Vault helps organize the everyday information families often need but do not know where to find.

People and Care
Important Contacts
The people your family may need to contact first.
Dependents and Care Notes
Routines, instructions, caregivers, and details that help others step in.
Pets
Food, medication, vets, routines, and trusted caregivers.
Household and Access
Home Access
Keys, codes, alarm notes, garage details, and important access instructions.
Household Information
Utilities, services, maintenance notes, and home responsibilities.
Property and Assets
Property notes, vehicles, valuables, and where important records are located.
Financial, Legal, and Digital
Financial References
Accounts, bills, insurance, and financial information your family may need to locate.
Legal Documents
Where wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and important documents are kept.
Digital Accounts
Devices, subscriptions, account notes, and practical digital access guidance.
Wishes and Instructions
Final Wishes
Preferences, personal guidance, and the things you want understood.
Personal Messages
Notes for loved ones that can be saved with your guidance.
First 72 Hours
The first contacts, priorities, and reminders your family may need early.

Private by Design

Your family guidance stays on your device.

Local Legacy Vault is built for sensitive family information. Your vault is stored locally on your own computer, not in a cloud account controlled by someone else.

Stored locally
Your vault lives on your own computer.
Not stored in a cloud vault
Local Legacy Vault does not store your personal vault information online.
Encrypted and protected
Your private information is protected on your device.
You control access
You decide who knows where to find your vault and printed guides.

We cannot see your vault. We do not store your vault. Your information belongs to you.

Your vault is private by design
Storage location
Your device
Cloud sync
Not used
Internet required
After activation only
Vault password
Only you have it

Simple to Start

Three steps to family-ready guidance.

1

Add what matters first

Start with contacts, instructions, household details, wishes, and the information your family would need early.

2

Organize it privately

Your information is stored locally on your own computer and grouped into guided sections.

3

Create family-ready guidance

Create printable Family and Executor Guides your loved ones can follow when they need answers.

Create Your Family Guide

Do not leave your family with questions only you could answer.

Give them a clear place to begin, practical guidance to follow, and the specific information they may need when emotions are already heavy.