Will Executor — Who Carries Out Your Will
TimeWill Editorial · Updated 2026-06-19
A will executor is the person you name in your will — responsible for distributing the estate according to your wishes, notifying the heirs, and settling debts. Without a named executor, heirs can pass the buck and the estate may sit untouched for a long time. Digital assets need a separate, tech-savvy 'digital executor.' The Civil Code refers to this role as the 'estate administrator.'
Many people think they're done once the will is written. Nobody asks one question: who's going to carry it out? An estate doesn't fly into your family's hands automatically. Someone has to take the will to the bank, to the notary, and reach out to the heirs. That person is the will executor.
What an Executor Actually Does
- Notice & confirmation — After confirming your death, notify all heirs and confirm the will is valid.
- Inventory & valuation — List all property and, for assets like real estate, commission a professional appraisal.
- Settle debts — Before distributing the estate, pay off your debts and taxes first.
- Distribute the estate — Hand the property to the heirs as specified in the will.
How to Choose an Executor
Your spouse is the first choice — most convenient for handling day-to-day affairs. If your spouse isn't comfortable with technology, name a separate 'digital executor' to manage your WeChat accounts, crypto assets, and cloud storage — this person only needs basic IT literacy, not programming skills.
FAQ
Q: Does a will executor have to be a lawyer?
No. It can be your spouse, a friend, a relative, or a lawyer. A lawyer's advantage is professional expertise and neutrality between family members. If your family situation is simple, your spouse can serve as executor. For complicated families or multiple marriages, it's best to use a professional.
Q: Can the digital estate executor and the will executor be the same person?
They don't have to be. The will executor handles physical property — the house, the savings. The digital executor handles passwords — WeChat, exchanges, private keys. A good setup: a tech-savvy friend as the digital executor, your spouse as the will executor. Each handles their own domain; they don't get in each other's way.
Q: What if the executor declines?
Confirm with your executor in advance. It's not unusual — many people don't want the responsibility. What you do is ask first, then appoint. Best to name two executors, with one as backup.