Subscribe

Estate planning fintech Wealth lands $16 million in funding

wealth estate planning

The Wealth platform is designed to help clients better manage their legacies by creating plans online through a combination of proprietary legal documents and encrypted digital vaults. 

Fintech firms are disrupting the wealth management industry by focusing on investing for retirement, but much less attention has been paid to planning for what happens next. Wealth Inc., a digital estate planning platform co-founded by Rei Carvalho, former CEO of the fraud detection firm Emailage, has announced a $16 million seed funding round to fill the gap.

The platform is designed to help clients better manage their legacies by creating plans online through a combination of proprietary legal documents and encrypted digital vaults. 

A Wealth Inc. survey of 10,000 people in December found only 13% of respondents currently have access to estate planning services as part of their employee benefits, yet more than 70% said they’d set up a plan if such services were offered. 

While the company is aiming initially to offer its platform to human resources teams looking to provide benefits to their employees, the tech is also available to advisers, a spokesperson said.

“Life isn’t static, and neither is estate planning,” Carvalho said in a statement. “Taking care of your family and having a plan for your assets is an ongoing job that requires a dynamic ecosystem.”

The cumbersome world of estate planning still relies primarily on handwritten signatures, paper documents and three-ring binders, with only a handful of forward-thinking advisers using digital vaults like DropBox. 

Wealth is one of a number of companies looking to solve estate planning problems. 

In September, basketball icon Michael Jordan participated in an $11.6 million funding round for startup Vanilla. Wealth management entrepreneur Steve Lockshin founded Vanilla in 2019 to fully digitize the process for registered investment advisers with a platform that automates client estate planning and document processing. 

A major obstacle for advisers is they’re not specialized in estate planning and each state has a different set of legal requirements. Additionally, many clients think estate planning is only for the ultra wealthy, said Rafael Loureiro, co-founder and CEO of Wealth.

“We are changing that by providing the most comprehensive, accessible-for-everyone platform with an emphasis on education,” Loureiro said. “Everyone needs a plan, they may just not know it yet.”

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Into the metaverse

Financial services firms are hanging out their shingles in the burgeoning world of virtual societies, hoping to attract a new breed of digitally native customers.

Morningstar ranks best and worst robo-advisers

The latest study from the financial services firm found that top advice-oriented providers offer fairly comprehensive planning tools, ranging from online advice only to one-on-one human financial advisers who are just a phone call away. 

Schwab launches direct indexing

Schwab Personalized Indexing will bring the benefits of direct indexing, like better tax management and portfolio management capabilities, to a wider spectrum of investors and advisers.

Financial help a top concern for aspiring advisers

A new survey of some 4,300 financial advisers and students found that a lack of financial assistance was the No. 1 barrier to entry into the industry, with nearly half of the respondents citing finances as a top concern.

Goldman Sachs to acquire retirement plan robo NextCapital

The company's asset management unit already supervises a total of $350 billion in assets in defined-benefit and defined-contribution accounts and will utilize the acquisition to provide new digital tools to customers. 

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print