About Haven
Haven is a digital platform that helps people bring order to everything that will one day matter most — documents, accounts, values, and wishes. Most families are left in chaos when someone passes away: papers scattered, passwords lost, and no clear handover. Haven changes that.
It’s not just a vault for files, but a complete, structured overview of your life’s essentials — from wills, contracts, and medical directives to financial accounts and digital assets. You can record what exists, where it is kept, and who should have access. All data is encrypted with zero-knowledge technology, meaning only you and your chosen contacts can see it — not even Haven itself.
Haven is designed for both peace of mind today and clarity tomorrow. It allows you to organize your affairs while you’re alive, ensuring your loved ones will understand and manage everything smoothly later on. It combines practical planning (documents, passwords, instructions) with personal legacy (letters, memories, funeral wishes) in one secure and simple system.
Built with bank-level security, GDPR compliance, and optional Swiss hosting, Haven is the first holistic digital platform for life and legacy management — a trusted, enduring structure for everything that remains.
The project is currently in its MVP phase. The secure document vault, digital legacy management, and family access features are being built as a progressive web app with modern encryption and privacy standards. Early partnerships with insurers and funeral providers are in preparation, while the public pre-launch page and waiting list are already live. The goal is to release the first version within six to nine months and begin B2B pilots with banks and insurers shortly after.
Haven is developed by Christophe Braun, a product strategist and digital innovator with a background in AI, communication, and leadership development. As the founder, he combines human-centered design with technical precision to create digital tools that provide structure, trust, and continuity. Haven reflects his belief that preparation is not about control — it’s about care, clarity, and the quiet generosity of leaving things in order.