How to create a Facebook Memorial account for lost loved ones – and how to nominate your own ‘page heir’ when you die
Harry Pettit, Senior Digital Technology and Science Reporter
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ROUGHLY 8,000 Facebook users die every day, and dead profiles are expected to outnumber the living by the end of the century.
Grim statistics like these highlight an interesting question faced by the site's 2.5billion users - what happens to my Facebook account after I die?
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The Californian company has actually set up a way to "memorialise" a deceased friend or family member's account.
You can also nominate an heir for your page to look after it long after you're gone.
What is a memorialised Facebook account?
Once someone’s death is reported to Facebook, their page becomes “memorialised”.
This means the account is secured and then prevented from coming up in notifications or friend suggestions. A "Remembering" badge is added to the top of the profile.
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, you'll first have to set up a "".
A legacy contact is someone who you have given permission to look after your account after you have died.
They can manage aspects of your page, like friend requests and profile pictures, after it’s been memorialised.
A "tributes" section opens on your account where friends can post messages, memories and more. Your legacy contact controls your tributes section.
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on Facebook's website.
In Facebook's own words:
Click the down arrow in the top right of Facebook and click Settings.
Click Memorisation Settings.
Type in a friend's name in Choose a friend and click Add.
To let your friend know they're now your legacy contact, click Send.
To change or remove a legacy contact, follow steps 1–2 above, then click Remove. From there, you can add a new legacy contact if you'd like.
If your account is memorialised, your legacy contact will be notified.