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This Should Help

If your time on this Earth came to an unexpected end today, would your family know where to find your important documents and important information?

Did You Know?

Most people don’t want to think about it. But the reality is that every day, families across America scramble to piece together critical information during the most difficult time of their lives.

You can change that. Right now.

Who Needs This Service?

Life is unpredictable. Whether you’re 25 or 75, certain situations make having your affairs organized absolutely critical.

High-Risk Professions

If you work in one of America’s most dangerous jobs, your loved ones deserve to know you’ve prepared for the worst.

Top 10 Deadliest Jobs in the U.S.:

  • Logging workers
  • Roofers
  • Fishing & Hunting Workers
  • Construction Workers
  • Aircraft Pilots & Flight Engineers
  • Truck Drivers
  • Refuse & Recyclable Material Collectors
  • Structural Iron & Steel Workers
  • Underground Mining Machine Operators
  • Miscellaneous Agricultural Workers

First Responders & Military Personnel

You put your life on the line every day. Active and retired military personnel, police officers, firefighters, and EMTs—your families need this protection.

Special pricing available: Just $35/year for active and retired first responders and military.

Health Considerations

Certain health conditions increase your risk of unexpected death. Heart disease, cancer, stroke, and other conditions make advance planning essential.

Top 10 Causes of Death in the U.S.:

  • Heart Disease
  • Cancer
  • Accidents
  • Stroke
  • Chronic Lower Respiratory Diseases
  • Alzheimer’s Disease
  • Diabetes
  • Nephritis, Nephrotic Syndrome, & Nephrosis
  • Chronic Liver Disease & Cirrhosis
  • Suicide

If you or your family members have a history of any of these conditions, don’t wait.

Anyone with Complicated Affairs

You don’t need to be in a dangerous profession to benefit from This Should Help. You need this service if you:

  • Have affairs your beneficiary doesn’t know about
  • Keep certain financial accounts or assets private
  • Have digital assets, cryptocurrency, or online accounts
  • Own property in multiple locations
  • Have business interests or partnerships
  • Keep secrets that someone needs to know about if something happens to you
  • Are dealing with substance abuse or mental health challenges
  • Have a history of suicidal thoughts / ideations
 
This Should Help urges anyone dealing with substance abuse or having suicidal thoughts / ideations to utilize the resources listed below!


Important Resources:

  • Substance Abuse Helpline: 1-800-662-HELP (4357) – Available 24/7/365
  • Suicide Prevention Lifeline: Call or Text 988 – Available 24/7/365

What Your Family Needs to Know

The death of a loved one—whether expected or sudden—leaves families asking “now what?”

Here’s what needs to happen, and why having This Should Help makes it so much easier.

Immediate Steps After Death

  1. Get official pronouncement – If death occurs at home, call paramedics or police for proper documentation. Hospital or hospice staff will handle this automatically.

     

  2. Notify family and close friends – Spread the workload by having family members contact others.

     

  3. Contact clergy – Reach out to the deceased’s religious leader for counseling and funeral service arrangements.

     

  4. Arrange burial or cremation – Contact a funeral home. Check if the deceased belonged to a burial or memorial society.

     

  5. Obtain death certificates – You’ll need multiple original copies for estate matters. Your funeral director can help with this.

     

  6. Care for dependents and pets – Make immediate arrangements for anyone who depended on the deceased.

     

  7. Find important documents – This is where families struggle the most. Without This Should Help, this becomes an exhausting, frustrating search through filing cabinets, email accounts, safe deposit boxes, & more.

     

  8. Notify employer and Social Security – Contact the deceased’s workplace and local Social Security office.

     

  9. Protect against identity theft – The faster you notify financial institutions, credit bureaus, and government agencies, the better you protect your loved one’s identity from theft.

     

  10. Accept help – Friends and family want to assist. Let them answer phones, collect mail, care for pets, or guard the house during services.

     

This is Where This Should Help Changes Everything

Instead of your grieving family desperately searching for crucial information, they’ll have everything they need in one comprehensive report. No guessing. No panic. No frustration.

How to Avoid Overpaying for Funerals

The average funeral costs $7,000-$12,000. In your grief, it’s easy to overspend.

Here’s what you need to know about the FTC’s “Funeral Rule”:

Your Rights:

  • Buy only the funeral arrangements that you want or are required by law
  • Get price information on the telephone.
  • Get a written, itemized price list when you visit a funeral home
  • See a written casket price list before you see actual caskets
  • See a written outer burial container price list
  • Receive a written statement after you decide what you want and before you pay
  • Get an explanation in the written statement from the funeral home that describes any legal cemetery or crematory requirement that requires you to buy any funeral goods or services
  • Use an “alternative container” instead of a casket for cremation – they might be made of unfinished wood, pressed wood, fiberboard, or cardboard.
  • Provide the funeral home with a casket or urn you buy elsewhere
  • Make funeral arrangements without embalming

Get the Info You Need

Frequently Asked Questions

It’s simple. You create a private, secure document containing all the important information your loved ones would need if something happened to you—account details, insurance policies, and more. Only you and designated people have access to this information. When the time comes, we send a comprehensive report to your chosen beneficiaries so they have everything they need in one place.

Anyone who wants to protect their family from the stress of searching for critical information during a crisis. This includes people in high-risk professions (logging, fishing, construction, law enforcement), military personnel, first responders, elderly individuals managing multiple accounts, anyone with health concerns, people with complicated finances, and really anyone who cares about making things easier for their loved ones. Check out our Did You Know page for a complete list.

Currently, This Should Help is only available to residents of the United States, including all 50 states and Washington D.C.

We offer three pricing tiers:

All plans include a FREE 5-day trial with no credit card required.

Absolutely. We use encryption to protect your data during transfer and storage. We’ve also designed our questionnaire to collect the information your family needs while minimizing personally identifiable data. Your security and privacy are our top priorities.

All major credit cards.

You can reach us through our Contact Us page or email us directly at info@thisshouldhelp.com. We’re here to answer any questions you have.

We take your privacy seriously. For complete details on how we collect, use, and protect your information, please see our Privacy Policy.

No. Annual memberships run for 12 months from the day you sign up, regardless of when you join during the year.

Contact us through our Contact Us page and let us know you’d like to cancel. We’ll verify your identity through a brief conversation, then terminate your account and permanently delete all your information. Please note that annual memberships are non-refundable.

Yes! We offer a FREE 5-day trial with no credit card required and no obligation. It’s the perfect way to see how easy it is to organize your information and give yourself peace of mind.

Start Your Free Trial Now

Still have questions?

We’re here to help. Contact us and we’ll get back to you right away.

The Reality Nobody Wants to Face

Nobody plans to die unexpectedly. But it happens every single day.

Heart attacks. Car accidents. Workplace incidents. Sudden illness. Suicide. Homicide.

Your family will already be devastated by your loss. Don’t make them spend weeks or months desperately trying to locate your bank accounts, insurance policies, and more.

This Should Help gives them what they need, exactly when they need it most.

Start Your FREE 5-Day Trial Today

You have nothing to lose and everything to give your family.

No obligation. No risk.

See how easy it is to organize all your important information in one secure place. Then decide if the peace of mind is worth less than the cost of a monthly streaming subscription.