Start with the records that are difficult to reconstruct
If a password can be reset easily and nobody would be delayed by losing it, it may not be the first priority.
If a document, account instruction, or recovery code would be painful to rebuild under stress, it belongs near the top of the list.
Passwords and recovery paths
The obvious starting point is login access:
- password manager recovery details
- email account access
- device passcodes and recovery codes
- two-factor backup codes
- important service credentials
These are often the records that unlock everything else.
Documents that anchor real-life decisions
For many people, the highest-value items are documents:
- wills and estate notes
- insurance policies
- banking references
- company or partnership records
- identification scans where legally appropriate
A document without context can still create confusion, so pair it with a short note when needed.
Instructions for people, not just systems
Some of the most valuable content is not a file at all.
It is a clear instruction such as:
- who to contact first
- what to cancel
- what should not be touched yet
- what a beneficiary or executor needs to know
These notes reduce uncertainty more than most people expect.
Use collections to separate access
Do not put everything into one giant category called “important”.
Separate by responsibility. Family instructions, financial records, and business access often need different people and different release conditions.
That makes the vault easier to review and safer to unlock later.
Avoid common mistakes
The most common setup mistakes are:
- storing secrets without enough explanation
- inviting trusted contacts before deciding their scope
- mixing family, financial, and business access together
- never reviewing what is outdated
A strong first version is enough
The first useful vault does not need to be complete. It needs to be clear.
Start with the records that would matter most if someone had to step in unexpectedly, then improve the structure over time.