Your crypto.
Your legacy.

Self-custody that still works when the owner cannot act.

Audited by

When no one can act, transfer and recovery break down

When no one can act, transfer and recovery fail

1

Large amounts of crypto are lost not because of hacks, but because no one can act when it matters.

2

Legal recovery does not map to self-custody. Seed sharing, multisig, and MPC introduce new failure modes.

Crypto is often lost not to hacks, but because no one can act when it matters. Legal recovery does not map to self-custody, while seed sharing, multisig, or MPC introduce new failure modes.

Hospital stay

A continuity layer for self-custody

Without a built-in execution layer for absence or incapacity, self-custody remains incomplete by design.

Without a built-in execution layer for absence or incapacity, self-custody remains incomplete.

How it works

Security

Assets stay in owner-controlled wallets until execution conditions are met. Contracts stay fundless in normal operation.

Automation

Execution follows predefined on-chain rules and begins only when protocol-defined conditions are met.

Asset control

Before Distribution, assets stay fully manageable in owner-controlled wallets. During Distribution, approved plugins extend allowed actions.

Before you ask

Here we clarify how it works, what it does, and what it does not do.

Nothing changes. Your assets remain under your control. The trade-off is that self-custody does not define how execution should work if you cannot act. CryptoLegacy lets you define that path in advance.

No. Assets are never moved into CryptoLegacy. They stay in your wallet. You grant token approvals only for the assets you choose to include, and you can revoke them at any time.

Yes. Your assets remain fully under your control in your own wallet. The protocol holds no funds. Transfers happen only when the execution conditions you defined are met.

Self-custody protects your assets while you can act. CryptoLegacy extends that protection to scenarios where you cannot β€” incapacity, prolonged absence, or loss of access. It adds an execution layer without giving up ownership.

Yes. The owner can cancel or reset the process at any point before final distribution. The protocol includes a waiting period before any irreversible action, giving the owner time to intervene if they regain access.

Multisig requires all parties to be available and coordinated. Key sharing creates single points of failure and trust assumptions. Legal tools have no on-chain enforceability. CryptoLegacy executes predefined rules autonomously, without relying on third-party availability or off-chain processes.