Letters, not legalese
Write in your own voice — messy, emotional, real. Separate notes for each person, plus shared messages for the whole family or friend group.
Estate plans handle the paperwork. This handles the words.
“Something you want to leave for a loved one after death?”
LastDeathNote.com is a quiet place to write the things you don’t want to leave unsaid — letters, memories, gentle instructions — and choose who should receive them when you’re no longer here.
This is about planning and love — not rushing anything. Think of it like a time capsule of words for the people who matter most, whenever “later” comes.
Why this exists
LastDeathNote isn’t about being morbid. It’s about giving future versions of the people you care about a little more clarity, love, and direction — straight from you.
Write in your own voice — messy, emotional, real. Separate notes for each person, plus shared messages for the whole family or friend group.
Estate plans handle the paperwork. This handles the words.
Leave gentle pointers: where important documents live, who to call for the house, how to cancel that subscription. No passwords in plain text, ever.
Less chaos in the hardest weeks your people will ever walk through.
Notes stay encrypted and private. You decide who they’re for and under what conditions they should be released when the product is live.
Written now, held safely, delivered later.
For the tough topics, writing prompts and gentle templates can nudge you in the right direction without turning your note into a form letter.
“I don’t know where to start” is normal. We’ll help with that.
Group notes by person — partner, kids, friends, chosen family. See at a glance who you’ve written to and what’s still blank.
A quiet checklist of hearts you want to take care of.
LastDeathNote doesn’t replace wills, lawyers, or doctors. It sits beside all of that — in the space where you just want to say “here’s what I hope for you.”
Emotional context for the practical decisions.
How it works
No countdowns, no pressure. You set this up on your timeline. The point is to make it easier for the people you love, not harder for you right now.
When beta opens, you’ll be able to create an account that isn’t searchable or public. Add the names of the people you might one day want to write to.
Start with one letter, or one small practical note. Save drafts. Come back when you have more to say. Change your mind as many times as you need to.
You’ll be able to set rules for each note — who it’s for, who can help deliver it, and how to confirm it’s the right time before anything is sent.
You stay in control while you’re here. Your words stay protected when you’re not.
Questions & reassurance
Talking about death can feel weird, scary, or too much. That’s normal. The goal here isn’t to dwell on it — it’s to ease a tiny bit of the future weight for the people you love.
No. LastDeathNote is about long-term planning and love, the same way people write wills or keep important documents together. It’s for “whenever that day comes, far in the future”, not for right now.
A will handles money and legal decisions. This is more about the things you’d say sitting at the kitchen table: apologies, encouragement, stories, guidance. They work alongside each other, not instead of each other.
No. The product is being designed as a private space, not a social network. No public profiles, no search by name. Notes are encrypted and tied to the recipients you choose.
You stay in control while you’re alive. You can edit, pause, or delete notes at any time, and you can decide that some things never get sent after all.