Why Your Financial Plan Should Account for Cryptocurrency—Even If You Don’t Own Any
October 23, 2025

Cryptocurrency is changing how wealth is built, stored, and transferred. Learn why understanding digital assets is becoming essential to holistic financial and estate planning.
Why Cryptocurrency Deserves a Place in Your Financial Awareness
Even if you’ve never bought a single Bitcoin, cryptocurrency may still affect your financial future. With digital assets becoming more common in portfolios, businesses, and estates, it’s increasingly important to understand how they fit into a broader financial strategy.
At Omni 360 Advisors, we’ve observed how digital assets are influencing financial and estate conversations—especially among business owners, fiduciaries, and families navigating generational wealth. Even without direct ownership, exposure to cryptocurrency can arise through inheritance, trust administration, or business interactions.
Understanding how crypto functions, and how it is treated in legal and financial systems, allows for better preparation—and helps avoid preventable risks down the line.
What Exactly Is Cryptocurrency?
Cryptocurrency refers to digital or virtual currencies that use cryptography for security and are typically maintained on decentralized networks (blockchains). Bitcoin is the most well-known, but thousands of digital coins exist today, with new use cases emerging regularly.
Recent studies suggest nearly one in three U.S. adults owns some form of cryptocurrency. Even if you don’t own it yourself, someone close to you might. That makes it likely digital assets could appear in your estate, business dealings, or as part of an inheritance you give or receive.
A key issue with crypto is its invisibility. If wallet credentials or accounts are not disclosed and documented, these assets may become inaccessible. In fact, an estimated $140 billion in crypto has reportedly been lost due to forgotten keys or undisclosed holdings.
Key Considerations for Financial and Estate Planning
When reviewing your overall financial or estate plan, here are several important points to keep in mind regarding digital assets:
1. Unique Regulatory Classification
The IRS classifies cryptocurrency as property, not currency. That distinction carries implications for capital gains taxes and tax reporting. Regulatory agencies may interpret crypto differently, which adds complexity to compliance and planning.
2. Lack of a Paper Trail
Unlike traditional assets, cryptocurrency doesn’t automatically leave behind records. Unless documented in planning documents or shared securely, these assets may remain undiscovered.
3. Custodial and Access Limitations
Not all platforms offer legacy planning tools. Some allow for designated beneficiaries; others do not. Even when access protocols are in place, fiduciaries may still encounter technical or legal challenges when trying to recover digital assets.
Educational Planning Tips: Including Crypto in Broader Strategies
For those aiming to build a resilient financial plan—regardless of direct crypto ownership—the following steps may serve as a helpful framework:
✅ Maintain an Inventory
Keep a private, up-to-date record of any digital assets, including access methods and storage details. Even if these assets aren’t your own, awareness of how others in your family or business manage theirs can be important.
✅ Review Legal Documents for Digital Asset Language
Ensure that wills, trusts, and powers of attorney include provisions for digital assets. This can help fiduciaries fulfill their duties more effectively while minimizing legal ambiguity.
✅ Understand Trust Structures
Some individuals opt to hold digital assets in trusts to provide more control and continuity. While not necessary for everyone, it’s a topic worth discussing with your advisors, particularly in multigenerational or business contexts.
✅ Initiate Conversations with Professionals
Financial and estate advisors can help integrate digital asset considerations into broader plans. These conversations are increasingly relevant even for those who view crypto as a marginal part of the financial system.
Why This Matters—Even Without Direct Investment
Cryptocurrency isn’t inherently more risky than other asset classes—but its decentralized nature, evolving regulation, and lack of built-in oversight require different forms of diligence. If overlooked, digital assets can become a source of confusion, loss, or even litigation.
Consider scenarios where a fiduciary retains access to a wallet long after being removed from their role—or where no one knows a wallet exists at all. These risks highlight why educational awareness, documentation, and secure access protocols are essential.
The Takeaway: Be Informed, Not Caught Off Guard
Cryptocurrency may or may not become a part of your personal portfolio. But it’s already influencing how wealth is managed, transferred, and taxed. As the financial landscape evolves, being prepared—and informed—is a strategic move.
For those reviewing financial or estate plans, digital assets are simply one more dimension to consider in a comprehensive approach.
Interested in a Review?
📅 If you’re looking to understand how digital assets may affect your wealth strategy, estate plan, or fiduciary responsibilities, Omni 360 Advisors and Omni Legacy Law offer comprehensive planning reviews. These sessions are educational and tailored to your unique situation.
This blog was developed with the assistance of AI-based tools for research, drafting and editing support (Chat GPT), and reviewed by OMNI 360 personnel for accuracy and relevance.