For Individuals & Families

If the worst happens, the right people get in. No one else.

A personal break-glass vault for the things that matter most — your digital life, your crypto, your emergency documents. Locked with end-to-end encryption only you control, and opened only by the people you choose, under the conditions you set.

E2E
Encrypted on your device, not our servers
T-of-N
Multi-party release — no single key
0
Usable keys we can ever read
PQ
Post-quantum encryption, built in

Break-glass, for a person

Big organisations keep their most dangerous secrets behind “break-glass” access: sealed away, and openable only by several trusted people acting together in an emergency. You deserve the same for your own life. The hard part has never been keeping a secret — it’s making sure the right people can reach it at exactly the right moment, and absolutely no one else before then. A password in your head dies with you. A note in a drawer can be read by anyone who finds it. Glassbreak is the in-between that doesn’t exist anywhere else: held safely while you’re here, released to the people you trust only when it’s truly needed.

Three ways people use it

Most people start with one and grow into the rest. Follow any card for the detail, the checklist, and the answers to the questions people ask first.

Digital legacy

For your family, when they need it

The accounts, documents, and instructions your family would be locked out of if something happened to you — held safely, and handed over only when it should be.

  • Name an executor and trusted delegates
  • Time-locked or quorum release — never a free-for-all
  • A what-to-store checklist so nothing is missed
  • Plain-English instructions alongside each item
Plan your digital legacy
Crypto inheritance

Self-custody that survives you

A seed phrase on paper in a drawer is one fire, one flood, or one bad day from gone forever. Split it across people and places so no single point can lose it — or leak it.

  • T-of-N shares split across people and clouds
  • No usable key ever sits on our servers
  • Post-quantum encryption for decades-long horizons
  • Recoverable by your heirs without trusting one custodian
Protect your keys
Emergency / ICE kit

Ready before you need it

Passports, medical directives, insurance, emergency contacts — the documents you scramble for in a crisis, reachable from your phone and releasable to a trusted contact when it counts.

  • Passports, directives, insurance, ICE contacts
  • Trusted-contact release when you can’t respond
  • Reachable from your phone, anywhere
  • Built for solo travellers and lone workers
Build your ICE kit

How it keeps a secret — in plain English

No jargon required. Four ideas do the whole job. The full cryptographic detail lives on the security page if you want it.

Encrypted on your device, not ours

Everything you store is locked on your own device before it ever reaches us. We hold encrypted blobs we cannot read. There is no master key on our side to lose, leak, or be compelled to hand over.

No single person holds the key

You choose how access opens: a single trusted contact, or a quorum where several people each hold a share and any agreed number of them — say two of three — are needed together. No one person, including us, can open it alone.

Released only when it should be

Access can be time-locked, gated behind a check-in you keep answering, or approved by the people you named. Nothing opens early, nothing opens by accident, and you stay in control while you’re here.

Built to outlast the bad day

Your vault lives across independent clouds with no shared point of failure, and is protected with post-quantum encryption designed to hold up for decades — long after the day you set it up.

“Why not just use a password manager?”

Password managers are great at the job they were built for — logging you in today. They were not built for the day you can’t. That’s a different problem, and it needs different plumbing.

When you’re gone or incapacitated
Password managerAccess dies with your master password — or relies on a single recovery contact who can see everything.
GlassbreakMulti-party or trusted-contact release hands over exactly what you chose, to the people you chose, when the conditions you set are met.
Who can open it
Password managerWhoever has the master password. One point of failure, one point of compromise.
GlassbreakA quorum you define (T-of-N) or a named trusted contact — no single key, including ours.
What we can see
Password managerSome vendors can reset access or read recovery data on their servers.
GlassbreakEncrypted on your device first. We store ciphertext we cannot read, with zero service-held keys.
Longevity
Password managerBuilt for logins you use today.
GlassbreakBuilt for things meant to outlast you — post-quantum encryption, multi-cloud storage, decades-long horizons.

Keep your password manager. Glassbreak sits alongside it for the things that need to outlast a single login — and a single person.

See how it actually works

We’d rather show you the engineering than ask you to trust a slogan. The architecture is public.

Set it up once. Rest easier after.

Create a free vault, add the first thing that’s been nagging at you, and name the people who should be able to reach it. It takes an afternoon and it’s one less thing to worry about.

Glassbreak does not provide legal or estate-planning advice. A vault holds and releases what you put in it under the rules you set; it is not a will and does not replace one. Talk to a qualified professional about how it fits your wishes and local law.

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