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Glossary

Two-Factor Authentication

Two-factor authentication adds a second proof step after the password, often through a text message, authenticator app, hardware key, or approval on another device.

Definition

Two-factor authentication, often shortened to 2FA, is an extra security step that asks for a second code, device approval, or physical security key after the password is entered.

Why It Matters

Two-factor authentication protects accounts, but it also explains why families can lose access even when they know the password. The second factor may still depend on a phone number, an authenticator app, or a device no one else can unlock.

Planning for 2FA means documenting how accounts can be recovered, not weakening the security itself.

Common Mistakes

  • Assuming that a password alone is enough if something happens.
  • Canceling the phone number or wiping the device that receives login codes before the account list is stable.
  • Failing to record where authenticator apps, backup codes, or hardware keys are kept.

Safe Best Practices

  • Document which accounts use text codes, authenticator apps, security keys, or approvals on another device.
  • Record the location of backup codes and recovery devices in a secure plan.
  • Treat the phone number tied to 2FA as a high-priority estate asset until access is stable.

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