You bought Bitcoin before the wedding. Or maybe you bought it together, pooling income from a joint account. Perhaps you mined it. Perhaps it was a gift. Perhaps you moved it between wallets so many times you can barely recall the chronology yourself.
Here is the question no one asks until it is too late: Is your Bitcoin separate property or marital property?
The answer determines who can access it while you are alive, who inherits it when you die, how it is divided if you divorce, and how much estate tax your estate may owe. For married couples with meaningful Bitcoin holdings, getting this question right — and building a plan around it — is one of the highest-leverage financial decisions you will ever make.
Separate Property vs. Marital Property: The Foundational Question
American property law splits into two camps that treat Bitcoin very differently depending on when and how you acquired it.
Bitcoin family office in Texas states (9 states) treat most assets acquired during marriage as equally owned by both spouses — regardless of whose name is on the wallet:
In these states, Bitcoin purchased with marital income during the marriage is presumed to be 50% your spouse's — even if they never held a key, never logged into an exchange, and couldn't explain what a UTXO is. This is true for on-chain Bitcoin, exchange balances, and cold storage alike.
Common law / equitable distribution states (the remaining 41 states plus D.C.) take a different default approach: property belongs to the spouse who acquired it, as long as that property remains traceable and separate. Bitcoin you bought with your own funds, held in your own wallet, and never mixed with joint assets can remain your separate property in these states.
However — and this is the critical nuance — neither regime protects you automatically. Intent alone is not enough. How you hold, fund, and document your Bitcoin matters enormously.
The Commingling Trap
Commingling is the legal term for mixing separate property with marital property in a way that makes them inseparable. It is the most common reason Bitcoin that should be separate property ends up being treated as marital property — and it happens quietly, without any court order, often without either spouse noticing.
Buying Bitcoin on an exchange funded by a joint checking account — even once — can commingle an otherwise separate holding.
Depositing mining proceeds into a shared wallet taints the entire wallet's history in some jurisdictions.
Moving pre-marital Bitcoin to a hardware wallet purchased with community funds has been argued as commingling in litigation.
In community property states, commingling can make the entire asset community property. In equitable distribution states, it collapses the traceability argument that separates separate property from marital property.
The solution is rigorous segregation: pre-marital Bitcoin stays on its own hardware wallet, funded only from pre-marital or documented-separate funds. Post-marital Bitcoin acquired with separate funds lives in a clearly documented, separately funded wallet. No cross-pollination. The paper trail matters as much as the custody arrangement itself.
The Prenuptial Solution for Bitcoin Holders
A well-drafted prenuptial (or postnuptial) agreement is the clearest way to establish ownership intent before a dispute arises. For Bitcoin holders, a Bitcoin-specific prenup should address several things that most generic prenup templates miss entirely.
A Bitcoin prenup should specify:
- Which wallets, addresses, or exchange accounts are separate property and why
- How appreciation on separate Bitcoin will be treated (separate vs. marital)
- The process for documenting new Bitcoin acquisitions as separate vs. marital
- What constitutes commingling — defined explicitly — and what does not
- How Bitcoin acquired jointly will be divided in the event of dissolution
- Access rights if one spouse becomes incapacitated
Never include seed phrases, private keys, wallet PINs, or passphrase information in a prenuptial agreement. Court filings can become public record. Instead, the agreement should reference wallet addresses or account identifiers only — ownership, not access credentials. Store access separately in a secure estate planning envelope or with a trusted custodian.
Postnuptial agreements can accomplish similar goals after marriage and are recognized in most states, though they face somewhat higher scrutiny. Either way, the time to establish ownership clarity is before a dispute — not during one.
Five Spousal Planning Strategies for Bitcoin Holders
Clarifying ownership is step one. Structuring it for longevity, tax efficiency, and incapacity protection is step two. Here are the five primary strategies that apply specifically to married couples holding meaningful Bitcoin.
-
Revocable Living Trust — Co-Trustee Structure
A joint revocable living trust — with both spouses named as co-trustees and beneficiaries — solves the most immediate problem: probate. Bitcoin held in a properly funded revocable trust passes directly to the surviving spouse without court involvement. Both spouses retain full access during life. If one spouse becomes incapacitated, the other continues as sole trustee without petitioning a court for authority. This is the foundational layer for most married couples' Bitcoin estate plans.
-
Portability — Capturing Both Exemptions
The federal estate tax exemption is approximately $15 million per person, made permanent under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (2025). If the first spouse to die has unused exemption, the surviving spouse can inherit it via a portability election. This election is not automatic: the estate of the deceased spouse must file a federal estate tax return (Form 706) within nine months of death — even if no tax is owed — to make the election. For Bitcoin holders whose holdings may appreciate substantially, capturing both spouses' exemptions via portability can shield tens of millions of dollars from estate tax.
-
SLAT — Spousal Lifetime Access Trust
A Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT) is an irrevocable trust where one spouse (the grantor) transfers Bitcoin out of the taxable estate and names the other spouse as a discretionary beneficiary. The Bitcoin is removed from the grantor's estate — locking in today's exemption before it potentially expires — while the couple retains indirect access via the spouse-beneficiary. The key risks: if the marriage dissolves, access to the trust disappears. If both spouses create SLATs for each other ("reciprocal SLATs"), the IRS may challenge them as shams. Careful drafting — and ideally, staggered trust creation — is required.
-
A/B Trust Structure
The A/B trust (also called a bypass trust) was the dominant spousal estate planning structure before portability was made permanent in 2013. Today it is less common at the federal level but remains highly relevant in states with their own estate taxes and low exemptions — Oregon and Massachusetts exempt only $1 million, for example, and have no portability. An A/B structure funds the "B" (bypass) trust up to the state exemption upon the first death, sheltering that amount from both the decedent's estate and the surviving spouse's eventual estate. For Bitcoin holders in low-exemption states with significant holdings, this strategy is far from obsolete.
-
Joint multisig — Collaborative Custody
At the custody layer, a 2-of-3 multisig setup with both spouses holding keys — plus a trusted third party (an attorney, a professional co-signer service, or a trusted family member) — addresses multiple problems simultaneously. Spending requires two signatories, so neither spouse can unilaterally drain the wallet. If one spouse dies or is incapacitated, the other can sign with the third-party key without going to court. For large Bitcoin holdings, this is the operationally sound equivalent of a joint bank account — with no custodial counterparty risk. Define Bitcoin family office minimum requirements amounts: everyday transactions from a separate hot wallet; major transfers require multisig consensus.
Bitcoin Mining: The Most Powerful Tax Strategy Most Families Miss
While estate planning structures like SLATs and bypass trusts reduce estate tax exposure, Bitcoin mining offers real-time income tax advantages — bonus depreciation, operating expense deductions, and strategic timing of gain recognition — that compound alongside your estate plan. If your family office is exploring direct Bitcoin acquisition strategies with tax efficiency built in, mining deserves a serious look.
Explore Mining Tax Strategy →Beneficiary Designation Coordination
Married couples typically name each other as primary beneficiaries on IRAs, 401(k)s, and life insurance policies — and then never revisit those designations again. This creates several problems when Bitcoin is part of the picture.
First, beneficiary designations on retirement accounts supersede your will and trust. If your IRA beneficiary form still names your ex-spouse, they inherit the IRA regardless of what your trust says. For Bitcoin IRAs — increasingly common via self-directed IRA custodians — this is a particularly high-stakes oversight.
Second, the interaction between Bitcoin in trust and life insurance proceeds matters. Life insurance paid directly to a surviving spouse increases their taxable estate. Paying it to an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) instead keeps it outside the estate — a structure that pairs logically with a SLAT holding Bitcoin.
Third, consider contingent beneficiaries. If both spouses die simultaneously — we discuss this below — who receives the IRA? If the contingent beneficiary is a minor child, the funds may be controlled by a court-appointed guardian rather than the person you intended.
The Simultaneous Death Scenario
Estate planning attorneys call it the "common disaster" scenario: both spouses die in the same accident or within days of each other. It is statistically unlikely but legally catastrophic if your documents ignore it.
Without explicit trust language addressing simultaneous death, state law applies the Uniform Simultaneous Death Act, which presumes each spouse predeceased the other — leading to dual probate proceedings, potential estate tax on the same assets twice, and distribution according to default rules rather than your intentions.
A 30- or 60-day survival clause: assets pass to the surviving spouse only if they survive by a defined period. If not, assets pass directly to children or other named beneficiaries per the trust's secondary distribution schedule.
A named successor trustee who can manage Bitcoin custody during the transition — ideally someone with technical literacy or explicit instructions to engage a professional custodian.
Bitcoin adds an additional layer of urgency: if both spouses die simultaneously and the Bitcoin is held in a 2-of-3 multisig with both spouses as signatories, the third key holder and the successor trustee must have documented access to the process for recovering funds. Without that, the Bitcoin may be permanently inaccessible even if ownership is legally clear.
The Incapacity Consideration
Death gets all the planning attention, but incapacity is statistically more likely to arrive first. A stroke, a serious accident, cognitive decline — any of these can remove one spouse from the picture without triggering death-related transfer mechanisms.
If your Bitcoin is held in a single-signature wallet controlled solely by one spouse, the other spouse has no legal authority to access it — regardless of marriage — without a court-issued conservatorship or a power of attorney that explicitly covers digital assets.
The revocable living trust solves this cleanly: as co-trustees, either spouse can act alone when the other is incapacitated. The joint multisig structure addresses it operationally: the capable spouse signs with their key, and the third-party key holder co-signs. The critical requirement in both cases is that the capable spouse knows how to execute the transaction — which means both spouses need baseline Bitcoin custody literacy, not just the one who originally set up the wallet.
A durable financial power of attorney, updated to explicitly reference digital assets and cryptocurrency, is also essential — even for couples with a trust — as a backstop for exchange-held Bitcoin and other assets that may not be titled in the trust.
Annual Review Triggers for Married Couples
Estate plans are not documents you sign and shelve. For married couples with Bitcoin, certain life events should trigger an immediate review — not a scheduled one.
| Life Event | What to Review |
|---|---|
| Marriage | Prenup, beneficiary designations, trust funding, community property analysis |
| Divorce or separation | Emergency beneficiary updates, multisig key rotation, trust restructuring |
| Birth or adoption of a child | Contingent beneficiaries, guardianship designation, successor trustee review |
| Death of a spouse | Portability election (9-month deadline), trust funding, key recovery execution |
| Move to a new state | Community property vs. common law reclassification, state estate tax exposure |
| Bitcoin price appreciation (>2× prior plan) | Estate tax exposure recalculation, SLAT funding review, exemption planning |
The state-of-residence trigger deserves special emphasis. Moving from a common law state to a community property state — or vice versa — does not automatically reclassify assets you already own, but it changes the rules going forward and can affect how a court treats assets if the marriage later dissolves. Moving to a state with its own estate tax (Oregon, Massachusetts, Washington, Minnesota, and others) can create immediate tax exposure that federal planning alone does not address.
Bringing the Plan Together
Bitcoin estate planning for married couples is not a single document or a single strategy. It is a layered structure — property law at the foundation, custody architecture in the middle, trust and tax strategy on top — with each layer reinforcing the others.
The couples who do this well share three characteristics. First, both spouses understand the custody structure at a functional level: where the Bitcoin is, how to access it, and who to call if something goes wrong. Second, they have a written letter of instruction — separate from the trust, never filed with a court — that walks a surviving spouse or successor trustee through the recovery process step by step. Third, they review the plan every year and when any trigger event occurs.
The couples who get into trouble are the ones who assume that because they are married, the transfer of Bitcoin is automatic — that love or legal status substitutes for documentation. It does not. Bitcoin does not know you are married. The blockchain does not care. The keys go to whoever holds them, and the estate plan determines whether the person holding them is the right one.
Get a Custom Bitcoin Estate Plan for Your Marriage
Community property analysis, spousal trust structures, joint multisig design, and tax-efficient strategies — built for your specific situation and state of residence.
Explore Our Services Schedule a ConsultationTools for Married Bitcoin Holders
Use our planning tools to model your estate tax exposure and evaluate gifting strategies for your combined Bitcoin holdings.
Bitcoin Wealth Dashboard
Track combined household holdings, estate tax exposure, and exemption utilization in real time.
GRAT Optimizer
Model grantor retained annuity trust scenarios to transfer Bitcoin appreciation tax-free to heirs.