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If you use Apple devices regularly, then your Apple account has lots of important files and data attached to itâincluding photos and videos of precious memories and extensive email archives that you need to hang on to.
Apple gives you many ways to make sure this data is looked after, including setting up a couple of key contacts who become attached to your account: a recovery contact (who can help you get back into your account if youâre locked out), and a legacy contact (who can get into your account if you die.)
There are good reasons for setting up both of these contacts, and it doesnât take long to do. You can specify more than one contact in each case, and change your chosen contacts at any time.

Letâs start with a recovery contact, a specified person you trust and can turn to if you find yourself locked out of your account. Itâs one of the most reliable methods out there for restoring access to your Apple account, because it relies on an actual human being who knows you rather than passwords or authenticator apps.
Apple says your recovery contact âshould be a person that you know and trust, like a family member or a close friend.â You can set up to five recovery contacts for your account. If youâre using Family Sharing with your account, Apple will recommend the other people in your family as your contacts, but youâre free to choose who you like.
Your recovery contacts will need access to an iPhone, iPad, or Mac, and their own Apple accountâso you canât pick any friends and relatives who only use Android or Windows. Apple wonât store any information about who your contacts are, so itâs important that you remember who youâve nominated (you canât recover your recovery contacts).
To set up your recovery contact(s) on an iPhone or iPad, open Settings, tap on your name, pick Sign-In & Security > Recovery Contacts, then follow the instructions on screen. You can also do this from a Mac, via System Settings: Click on your name, then Sign-In & Security, then Recovery Contacts. If itâs someone already in your Family Sharing group, the contact is added automatically; if not, theyâll need to accept your request.
If you get into trouble accessing your account, your recovery contacts can help you out. From Settings on an iPhone or iPad, or System Settings on a Mac, they need to select their name, then choose Sign-In & Security > Account Recovery. Once they select your name, theyâll get a recovery code which they can pass along to you, which will help confirm your identity to Apple and get you back into your account.

Itâs never pleasant to think about death, but your chances of escaping it are zeroâso you want to make sure that getting your affairs in order is as straightforward as possible for the loved ones you leave behind. Of course, our digital legacies are becoming a bigger and bigger part of our worldly goods and possessions.
Apple lets you specify what it calls a legacy contact, someone who you grant permission to access your Apple account after youâre gone. This includes access to your photos, messages, notes, and files, but it doesnât cover passwords or payment information. You can specify more than one legacy contact, and the people you pick donât have to be using Apple devices or have an Apple account.
On an iPhone or iPad, open up Settings, tap your name, then pick Sign-In & Security > Legacy Contact to choose someone. If youâre on macOS, from System Settings select your name, and then click Sign-In & Security > Legacy Contact. No confirmation is required, but you will be prompted to send your chosen contacts the digital key they will need to access your account in the future.
Before Apple will let these designated contacts into your account, theyâll need both the digital key you gave them and a copy of your death certificate. Once the administrative work is out of the way, theyâll be granted access to a special legacy contact Apple account, through which they can get to the information youâve left behind.
âYour legacy contact has access to your data for a limited timeâthree years from when the first legacy account request is approvedâafter which the account is permanently deleted,â Apple says. Note that if youâve specified more than one contact, they can all take action on your data and files independently of each other.
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