Planning ahead: get your life admin ready for your future executor
Planning ahead is simply about making life easier for the person who will have to sort everything out when you die. This page pulls together the key areas you can work on in advance so your executor is not starting from scratch.
Is this the right place for you?
This page is for you if you want to get ahead of things rather than leaving a pile of admin for someone else. You do not need to be ill or older, just ready to make life easier for your future executor.
If you are already dealing with a recent death, you may find the After Death page more helpful right now.
Learn more in Executor Basics
Make a quick “who’s who” list
Write down the key people your executor may need to contact, such as close family, your employer and landlord. A simple list in a notebook or document is enough to start.
Open People & Contacts
Capture your main bills and access
List your main bank account, mortgage or rent, energy, broadband and mobile. Add a short note about how to get into your phone or password manager without sharing actual passwords
See Property & Bills and Digital Life
Build a simple plan over time
If you want to go a bit further, you can build your planning ahead in stages. These steps link out to the main guides and templates that help most people get started.
Step 1: Make it clear who’s in charge
Check who your current executor is, or who you would like it to be. Read a simple explainer on what an executor does and make a note of where your will is kept.
- What an executor does and how to choose one
- Simple timeline of what happens after a death
Step 3: Add a little guidance in your own words
Add short notes in plain English so your executor and family are not guessing what you would have wanted.
- Template: key contacts list for my executor
- Template: digital access note for my executor
- For my executor: a short guidance note
Browse planning ahead content by area
If you prefer to browse around and pick your own starting point, you can explore planning-ahead content through these six areas.
Executor Basics
How executors work in England and Wales, what they do and how you can help in advance.
