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NextLifeBook is an online legacy planning and digital memory service for individuals and families. Its core goal is to help users centrally manage wills, important documents, messages for loved ones, and gift arrangements, so family members are not left in confusion after an unexpected event. It is not a typical enterprise collaboration SaaS product; it is closer to a vertical tool combining “estate planning + digital vault + scheduled delivery of emotional content.”
The product offers a free online will generator, with the site claiming that a simple will can be created in about 10 minutes and stored on the platform. Legacy Planner is used to organize estate and key personal information. The digital memory module supports text, photos, videos, and voice messages, and can send them on birthdays or special dates. PLUS also includes more storage, gifts, LPA Guided Consult, while some features such as AMD, Advance Care Plan, and a 30-minute will review are marked as Coming Soon. In terms of security, the website states that it uses encrypted storage and “industry-leading” protection, and provides a privacy policy and data protection policy, but it does not disclose specific certifications such as ISO, SOC, or PDPA.
Pricing follows a freemium model. FREE is 0.00, with limited features and storage. PLUS costs 6.88 per month, with 10% off annual billing, significantly higher storage, and added will storage, Legacy Planner, and consultation services. Multi Generation starts from 78.00 per month and requires contacting an advisor. The site also shows several limited-time free promotions, such as 1 year of PLUS for free and free lifetime membership; their actual availability should be confirmed during registration. Gift delivery is explicitly limited to Singapore, indicating a strong local focus.
Its strengths are a focused use case, the ability to combine legal planning, document organization, and emotional messages, a free plan that lowers the barrier to trying it, and an advisor-assisted service model. Its weaknesses are that multiple features are not yet live or have unclear status, while common enterprise-level capabilities such as third-party integrations, APIs, and permission systems are not disclosed. Security and compliance descriptions are fairly general, and cross-border users may face limitations around legal applicability, delivery, and advisor services.
It is best suited to individuals with family, assets, or gift delivery needs in Singapore who want to quickly create a simple will and organize affairs in advance. There is no textual basis for assessing access from mainland China, so it is currently unknown; payment methods are also not disclosed. If you are focused on local Chinese legal documents, e-signatures, or family asset arrangements, you may also evaluate Fadada, eSign, and local lawyer services. For overseas estate planning, it can be compared with Trust & Will, Farewill, and Everplans.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on nextlifebook.com official site.
nextlifebook.com is an Singapore Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach nextlifebook.com directly.