RUFADAA gives executors the legal right to access digital assets. Platforms don't always honor it. This is the gap that most estate attorneys eventually discover — usually when a frustrated client calls to say that Google or Apple has rejected their executor documentation and asked for a court order.

This guide maps the gap between RUFADAA legal authority and practical platform compliance — so attorneys and executors know what to expect before they start, not after the first rejection.

The Core Problem

RUFADAA creates a legal framework but does not compel platforms to comply in the way that a court order does. Platforms are required to comply with valid fiduciary requests — but they define "valid" differently, and many have bereavement processes that operate entirely outside the RUFADAA framework, neither honoring it explicitly nor refusing it outright.

The practical reality: Most platforms process bereavement requests through their own internal procedures regardless of whether the executor invokes RUFADAA. The platforms that respond to RUFADAA specifically are the ones with legal teams sophisticated enough to have built RUFADAA compliance into their estate processes. Many smaller platforms simply don't know what RUFADAA is.

Platform Compliance Categories

Based on current documented experience, platforms fall into three categories:

Google / Gmail
PartialCooperative for account closure and subscription cancellation. Data access (email content, Drive files) requires more documentation and often court order in practice despite RUFADAA authority. Submit via official Deceased User Request form. Timeline: 4–8 weeks.
Facebook / Meta
CooperativeHas well-developed bereavement process. Responds to death certificates and proof of relationship for memorialization. Removal requires more documentation. Does not require explicit RUFADAA invocation — their own process works. Timeline: 2–8 weeks depending on request type.
Apple
StrictMost restrictive major platform. Subscription cancellations are manageable. Data access requires court order specifically directing Apple to provide access — Letters Testamentary alone are often insufficient. Digital Legacy Contact (if configured pre-death) bypasses this. Timeline: weeks to months depending on scope.
Microsoft
PartialWill close accounts and cancel subscriptions with death certificate. Does not provide content access to family. RUFADAA invocation has limited effect on Microsoft's stated policy of not transferring content.
Coinbase / Kraken
CooperativeMajor exchanges have formal estate claim processes and are among the most RUFADAA-compliant platforms. Letters Testamentary plus death certificate typically sufficient. Timeline: 4–12 weeks. Crypto held on exchanges is recoverable; self-custody wallets are not.
PayPal / Venmo
CooperativeBoth have estate departments that respond to executor documentation. Balance recovery requires Letters Testamentary. RUFADAA-compliant approach works. Timeline: 4–6 weeks.
Netflix / Spotify / Streaming
CooperativeGenerally cooperative via bereavement channels. Death certificate sufficient — Letters Testamentary typically not required. RUFADAA is largely irrelevant for subscription cancellation purposes since no content access is being requested. Timeline: days to 2 weeks.
Major Banks (Chase, BofA, Wells)
PartialBanks operate primarily under banking law and their own estate procedures rather than RUFADAA. Letters Testamentary plus death certificate are standard requirements. In-person visits typically required for traditional banks. Online-only banks (Ally, Chime) are fully remote.

How to Write Executor Requests That Get Processed

Format matters. Platforms route requests to bereavement or estate teams based on how they're categorized. A poorly formatted request goes to general support and gets a generic response. A properly formatted request gets to the right team.

Key elements of an effective executor authorization letter:

Common rejection causes: Generic "to whom it may concern" letters without RUFADAA language. Missing document inventory. Requests that don't specify what action is being requested. Letters submitted through wrong channels (general customer service vs. estate services). Uncertified death certificate copies where certified originals are required.

When Courts Orders Are Actually Needed

Court orders become necessary in specific situations that Letters Testamentary alone cannot address:

Vera Legacy prepares RUFADAA-compliant executor letters.

Every executor authorization letter we prepare invokes RUFADAA authority correctly for the applicable state and is formatted to each platform's specific processing requirements. Request our attorney information pack.

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