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Thread: How much do you know about your wife (or other significant other)?

  1. #1
    Master MakeColdplayHistory's Avatar
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    How much do you know about your wife (or other significant other)?

    There was a bit on this on Sky News this morning but the world has moved on quite a bit since Mrs MCH and I got together.

    Should the worst happen, I could get into her phone (mainly because I've recently been helping her with a problem with it) but not her laptop. I don't know Gmail, Facebook or any other password. I also don't know much about her work situation - manager's name, phone number for HR etc. As it happens I wouldn't be able to tell you a direct phone number for my own manager or HR. Banking is a bit simpler, she's recently moved her own bank account to the same bank/branch as mine and our joint account, although I know she has some ISA and other savings elsewhere.

    If we were both to be hit by the same lightning bolt, our teenage kids would struggle to find anything. I don't know if we've got bank, work or 'online' info written down anywhere.

    Part of the problem is that I don't know the full list of what we ought to know about each other or where/how to keep it so it's helpful but not a liability.

    Any ideas/help appreciated.

    As an aside, our wills almost certainly need updating anyway - maybe this could be linked?

    **************** update 2021 *******************

    If you haven't got all this sorted, I implore you to do it now.

    I started this thread and, of course, did nothing about it.

    My wife recently had a serious accident and is currently unable to communicate or act on her own behalf. My concern is obviously about her current health and medium/long term outlook but the fact that I can't talk to her bank, need to speak to DVLA, don't know who her motorbike is insured with etc etc is all an unwelcome and unnecessary hassle.

    If the worst happens, it's the worst but it doesn't need to be the worst with added hoops to jump through.

    Get wills in place and certainly 'powers of attorney' so you can act for each other and make notes of important info.
    Last edited by MakeColdplayHistory; 6th October 2021 at 22:47.

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by MakeColdplayHistory View Post
    There was a bit on this on Sky News this morning but the world has moved on quite a bit since Mrs MCH and I got together.

    Should the worst happen, I could get into her phone (mainly because I've recently been helping her with a problem with it) but not her laptop. I don't know Gmail, Facebook or any other password. I also don't know much about her work situation - manager's name, phone number for HR etc. As it happens I wouldn't be able to tell you a direct phone number for my own manager or HR. Banking is a bit simpler, she's recently moved her own bank account to the same bank/branch as mine and our joint account, although I know she has some ISA and other savings elsewhere.

    If we were both to be hit by the same lightning bolt, our teenage kids would struggle to find anything. I don't know if we've got bank, work or 'online' info written down anywhere.

    Part of the problem is that I don't know the full list of what we ought to know about each other or where/how to keep it so it's helpful but not a liability.

    Any ideas/help appreciated.

    As an aside, our wills almost certainly need updating anyway - maybe this could be linked?

    Our IFA encouraged us to set up a (somewhat discouragingly called) "Death Box". It is a secure, fire-proof, box that contains all the necessary details regarding our wills, financial affairs, birth & marriage certificates, passwords, etc.

    What brought it to mind was the recent death of my mother. Fortunately she and my father had a magnificently efficient filing system that enabled my father to lay his hands on all the requisite information with ease. What struck us was how, in the absence of my father, we would simply have had no idea as to where that vital information resided.

    In our case all our financial affairs are jointly organised, so on that side I would have few worries, but the location of a lot of the other information is known only to us, and would not be found easily in the event of our demise.

    Creating the "Death Box" and passing the information to our nominated executors seemed a very logical thing to do.

    Edit: This was the box we bought: https://www.safelincs.co.uk/first-al...protection-a4/ - the service from Safelincs was excellent BTW.
    Last edited by willie_gunn; 12th July 2019 at 08:26. Reason: Found the link to the box itself.

  3. #3
    There are 2 situations you need to (unfortunately) think of -

    1. One of you dies
    2. One of you is sick/come etc...

    In case 1, you need to know everything that exists financially and all commitments held. A death cirtificate then does the rest.

    2. This is much more tricky. You either need a power of attorney set up in advance, or you have no chance without court order.

    What you don't know about you can't do anything.

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  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Bluehase284 View Post
    There are 2 situations you need to (unfortunately) think of -

    1. One of you dies
    2. One of you is sick/come etc...

    In case 1, you need to know everything that exists financially and all commitments held. A death cirtificate then does the rest.

    2. This is much more tricky. You either need a power of attorney set up in advance, or you have no chance without court order.

    What you don't know about you can't do anything.

    Sent from my SM-G950F using TZ-UK mobile app
    A very valid point - we had our LPA's drawn up at the same time as the will.

  5. #5
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    A valid topic really, we are going through something similar at the moment with the brother in-law, his current girlfriend knew nothing but we managed to access a few accounts etc by guessing passwords and memorable information.

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  6. #6
    A very interesting topic. I agree capturing all the account information and passwords in one place makes sense, but I wonder what the position (in particular of the banks) would be if a third party gained access to accounts in this way. For passwords etc. which in theory should be changed fairly regularly keeping details at a solicitor’s office doesn’t seem realistic. A safety deposit box would be one option, but a nominee would need to be able to access it if necessary.

  7. #7
    Master MakeColdplayHistory's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by willie_gunn View Post
    Our IFA encouraged us to set up a (somewhat discouragingly called) "Death Box". It is a secure, fire-proof, box that contains all the necessary details regarding our wills, financial affairs, birth & marriage certificates, passwords, etc.

    What brought it to mind was the recent death of my mother. Fortunately she and my father had a magnificently efficient filing system that enabled my father to lay his hands on all the requisite information with ease. What struck us was how, in the absence of my father, we would simply have had no idea as to where that vital information resided.

    Creating the "Death Box" and passing the information to our nominated executors seemed a very logical thing to do.
    That's the kind of thing I'm thinking of. We do have a few file boxes in the attic (inc. wills) but pretty much everything in there is out of date and I bet there's loads of stuff that should be in there that isn't.

    Can I ask you (and others) what info you have in there?

    Quote Originally Posted by Bluehase284 View Post
    There are 2 situations you need to (unfortunately) think of -

    1. One of you dies
    2. One of you is sick/coma etc...

    In case 1, you need to know everything that exists financially and all commitments held. A death certificate then does the rest.

    2. This is much more tricky. You either need a power of attorney set up in advance, or you have no chance without court order.

    What you don't know about you can't do anything.
    Good point about power of attorney. This is something we don't have set up and will include when we sort all this out.

    I'll start my own list here to help my own thinking...

    • Birth/Marriage certs (ours and the kids)
    • Wills (updated)
    • LPAs (need setting up)
    • Bank account details (bank, branch, account number) - password for online banking?
    • Shareholding info (all held electronically so website, account and password?)
    • Work contact details?
    • Work 'Death in Service' details
    • Life Assurance details
    • Critical Illness insurance policy details
    • Computer passwords
    • Phone passcodes
    • GMail, Facebook, Whatsapp details - which are the important ones? (nobody's going to mind if my Tripadvisor account goes dormant and stops posting restaurant reviews)
    • Utilities info - gas, electric, TV, phone, broadband?
    • National Insurance numbers
    • Pension Info - state, work, private
    • Is there anything else the state would need to know about either of us?
    Last edited by MakeColdplayHistory; 12th July 2019 at 09:34.

  8. #8
    I would suggest including details of any insurance policies (life, house, car, pets, watches, etc) as well as the V5's or leasing agreements for any cars you might own.

    If you have any other type of license (shotgun, firearms, etc) then photocopies of those, as well as details of the nearest firearms dealer so that they can be taken into storage.

    Whilst you may already have included details in your will regarding who will receive any particularly valuable assets (watches, works of art, etc) you might also want to include a list of those, together with the replacement value.

  9. #9
    My first thought is make a will together. Pretty much mandatory if you want to minimise inheritence tax.

    I am in complete awe of your user name, btw. It makes me smile every time I see it.

  10. #10

    How much do you know about your wife (or other significant other)?

    Quote Originally Posted by vortgern View Post
    A very interesting topic. I agree capturing all the account information and passwords in one place makes sense, but I wonder what the position (in particular of the banks) would be if a third party gained access to accounts in this way. For passwords etc. which in theory should be changed fairly regularly keeping details at a solicitor’s office doesn’t seem realistic. A safety deposit box would be one option, but a nominee would need to be able to access it if necessary.
    Use a password program like (Dashlane etc.) and keep the password for that with a solicitor if you must.
    Don’t think safety deposit boxes are that common or easily available for most people nowadays.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kingstepper View Post
    Use a password program like (Dashlane etc.) and keep the password for that with a solicitor if you must.
    Don’t think safety deposit boxes are that common or easily available for most people nowadays.
    Safety deposit boxes / or secure storage is definately a thing and is not that expensive starting at about £20 a month for a small one.

    We recently went through this with my mothers estate, she was very disorganised when it came to paperwork although I set up all her online bits and bobs so that was fairly straightforward.
    Eventually we found:
    * The will - held with her / our solicitor.
    * There was a lockbox stored by her bank, this held nothing beyond family documents but was relatively easy to access once the death certificate and will were provided.
    * The house deeds - as the house was purchased in 1968 and the mortgage was paid off in the 90's there was no electronic representation as there usually is with more modern transactions, eventually we tracked a package that was held by her bank via a letter informing my father that the mortgage had been paid off. Even when asking the bank for any other paperwork or packages that they might hold in my parents name they could not provide a definitive answer and were performing a lengthy manual search procedure with an estimate of 'months' to complete. Upon providing the reference number of the package containing the deeds they produced the pack within days.
    * Shares - all their share holdings were paper, we found a bunch of dividend documents and contacted the share company who are being very helpful to transfer ownership.
    * Insurances - we have not yet discovered any beyond the usual car, home and contents so I can't comment on that.

    As you can see it can be very stressful compiling all the information in order to wind up a loved ones estate and it has been one of the worst experiences of my life. I am in the process of compiling a 'death box' for my wife and I so whoever is left to sort things out will have everything to hand.

  12. #12
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    Whilst not helping with physical items password managers like LastPass can assist with online issues. You can either have a family plan so everyone has access or you can set up an emergency access feature whereby you give a trusted person an access code. You can also use LP as a storage vault for files such as pdfs so you can keep scanned copies of important documents & have them available as long as you can log in.

    The advantage of a pasword manager is that it's always up to date & you don't have to keep updating a document stuck in a safe somewhere. You can store notes in it so you have a central point for lists of things like bank account details & the like.

  13. #13
    Master subseastu's Avatar
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    I've basically got an A4 envelope in the (approved type) safe that contains wills, some certificates and a couple of pages of all our online websites and passwords. Power of attorney is useful to have

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  14. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by julian2002 View Post
    Safety deposit boxes / or secure storage is definately a thing and is not that expensive starting at about £20 a month for a small one.

    We recently went through this with my mothers estate, she was very disorganised when it came to paperwork although I set up all her online bits and bobs so that was fairly straightforward.
    Eventually we found:
    * The will - held with her / our solicitor.
    * There was a lockbox stored by her bank, this held nothing beyond family documents but was relatively easy to access once the death certificate and will were provided.
    * The house deeds - as the house was purchased in 1968 and the mortgage was paid off in the 90's there was no electronic representation as there usually is with more modern transactions, eventually we tracked a package that was held by her bank via a letter informing my father that the mortgage had been paid off. Even when asking the bank for any other paperwork or packages that they might hold in my parents name they could not provide a definitive answer and were performing a lengthy manual search procedure with an estimate of 'months' to complete. Upon providing the reference number of the package containing the deeds they produced the pack within days.
    * Shares - all their share holdings were paper, we found a bunch of dividend documents and contacted the share company who are being very helpful to transfer ownership.
    * Insurances - we have not yet discovered any beyond the usual car, home and contents so I can't comment on that.

    As you can see it can be very stressful compiling all the information in order to wind up a loved ones estate and it has been one of the worst experiences of my life. I am in the process of compiling a 'death box' for my wife and I so whoever is left to sort things out will have everything to hand.
    Personally I wouldn't pay £20/month but my point was, where are they, don't think most banks have them nowadays.

  15. #15
    Grand Master hogthrob's Avatar
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    Am I right in thinking that a joint bank account gets frozen in the event of one of you dying?


    Some very good suggestions about what to think of. Don't forget that in the event of your death, you need to have a good friend ready to go in and delete your search history.

  16. #16
    I don't believe it gets frozen if it's a joint account - all the money should go to the surviving partner. Certainly this was the case with my father, though clearly we informed the bank of my mother's death.

    I think it is then normal that, as and when the surviving partner dies, the executor should freeze the bank accounts and open a separate one for the estate. But that's just what I recall, so better to seek professional advice.

  17. #17
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    I think joint bank accounts if “joint and separate” are operable by the survivor, only in the case where two signatures are required for any transaction that it becomes awkward, been known to talk crack at times though.

  18. #18
    Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pitfitter View Post
    I think joint bank accounts if “joint and separate” are operable by the survivor, only in the case where two signatures are required for any transaction that it becomes awkward, been known to talk crack at times though.
    Yes - a joint bank account will just be transferred into the name of the survivor, no matter how high the balance.Just need to produce the death certificate - nothing else.

  19. #19
    Master woodacre1983's Avatar
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    This is a very useful thread! I am in the position of having lost both my parents both in their 70s in the last 2.5 years. Both sudden. When my mum passed my dad knew everything and it was easy to get all the transfers done and everything seamlessly moved to my dad.

    Then when my dad passed we had a massive nightmare. He had left no will. We had to hunt around for bank details finding he had many more than the cards he carried. Details for pension and mortgage was not all together and when it came to selling the house important details regarding solar panels and extensions built was very difficult to locate.

    This made my wife and I think hard my dad would of wanted things to be easy for us but he never planned how to do this. We are now living in a more digital age where it can realistically be harder to get information they just hunting for paperwork.
    We both now have a simple hardback notebook with relevant passwords and details of banks and loans and savings.



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  20. #20
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    Having lost my father recently this strikes a cord, however I am troubled about the ramifications the theft of such a box could cause.
    Banking, insurance and email details could make identity theft and fraudulent transactions a simple affair.

    Are there any safeguards put in place to prevent such?

  21. #21
    Master MakeColdplayHistory's Avatar
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    If you haven't got all this sorted, I implore you to do it now.

    I started this thread and, of course, did nothing about it.

    My wife recently had a serious accident and is currently unable to communicate or act on her own behalf. My concern is obviously about her current health and medium/long term outlook but the fact that I can't talk to her bank, need to speak to DVLA, don't know who her motorbike is insured with etc etc is all an unwelcome and unnecessary hassle.

    If the worst happens, it's the worst but it doesn't need to be the worst with added hoops to jump through.

    Get wills in place and certainly 'powers of attorney' so you can act for each other and make notes of important info.

  22. #22
    Master Guz's Avatar
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    Really sorry to hear of your wife's accident, a very difficult and worrying time for you.

  23. #23
    Master
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    I’m dreadfully sorry to hear about your wife’s (motorcycling?) accident and hope she recovers as well as possible. There are no words for these circumstances.

  24. #24
    Grand Master hogthrob's Avatar
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    Crikey, that's awful. Hoping for the best.

  25. #25
    Master MakeColdplayHistory's Avatar
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    Thanks all.

    It wasn't a motorbike accident but that's just an example of one of the many things I need to sort out. Her bike is sat safely in the garage and the insurance company will be taking ~£20/month out of her personal bank account. The £20/month is incidental in the grand scheme of things but because I can't access her bank account, see who it's insured with and almost certainly don't have the authority to cancel it, it's more hassle than it needs to be.

  26. #26
    Grand Master Sinnlover's Avatar
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    I am sorry to hear about your wife. I wish your wife a speedy recovery.

  27. #27
    Just wanted to add my best wishes for you and your wife


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  28. #28
    Grand Master wileeeeeey's Avatar
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    Hoping for the best for you and your wife. Sorry to hear this.

  29. #29
    Master Ruggertech's Avatar
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    So sorry to hear of your troubles, hoping your wife makes a full recovery.
    My sister lost her husband last year to covid, and the financial complications of which you speak were a massive millstone around her neck at an obviously difficult time. It took her months of emails, letters, phonecalls, form filling etc to get things sorted. She later said it robbed her of the chance to mourn properly.
    She had thought their finances were pretty simple beforehand, but not so, and implored me to make every single thing with my wife joint, close Isa's etc in separate names, everything. I must admit I haven't got around to it, and I suppose things could suddenly be too late (God forbid), and me or my wife has the headache my sister had, or indeed you are having.
    My very best wishes to you and your wife, and hope everything works out okay for you both.

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    Last edited by Ruggertech; 7th October 2021 at 10:24.

  30. #30
    Grand Master Raffe's Avatar
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    Best wishes for your wife and you with the rest of the family.
    Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.

  31. #31
    My thoughts and prayers are with you both.

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  32. #32
    Grand Master AlphaOmega's Avatar
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    Very sorry to hear about your wife MCH.

    This might be one of those threads where it's worth cutting and pasting all the updates into the original post. But I can imagine you have many other things to deal with. We might be able to help once the thread has gathered more entries.

    One thing I would add is a list of friends' details. It's difficult to contact them quickly without their current phone and email.

  33. #33
    RE: I don't know Gmail, Facebook or any other password

    Use something like 1Password,
    bitwarden etc ... to store all your passwords etc ... then store the master password somewhere safe, that way you'd have access should the worst happen.

    https://1password.com/

    https://bitwarden.com
    /

    I went through this last year when my father passed, he had all his passwords in an Excel spreadsheet
    Last edited by Nogbad The Bad; 7th October 2021 at 10:56.

  34. #34
    Master dice's Avatar
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    Very sorry to read the update, MCH. Wishing the best for your and yours.

    As mentioned, password managers seem ideal. Never looked into how you would transfer ownership/divulge credentials post mortem but the idea is there is an account linked to all your logins. I use 1Password and have an entry for every website I'm signed up to. Also some documents in there too such as passport, card info, etc. I put a high level of trust in it but I work in software and it seems robust and trustworthy. If I had to use an open-source alternative, it'd be BitWarden.

  35. #35
    Grand Master Chris_in_the_UK's Avatar
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    Sorry to read the news - my best wishes to you and the family.
    When you look long into an abyss, the abyss looks long into you.........

  36. #36
    Master vagabond's Avatar
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    Sorry to hear of your situation, wishing your wife a full and speedy recovery.

    All the best.

  37. #37
    Best wishes to you and your family MCH

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