A new startup called Eazewell, co-founded by NBA All-Stars Russell Westbrook and Kemba Walker alongside entrepreneur Donnell Beverly Jr., aims to modernize the troubled domain of funeral and end-of-life planning using artificial intelligence. The platform offers a 24/7 AI assistant to help families automate complex administrative tasks such as finding and booking funeral homes, canceling credit card accounts for the deceased, and coordinating estate or digital-asset wrap-ups. Eazewell launched publicly in 2025 after a beta period serving over 1,000 families, and claims to have already supported more than 100,000 households. The business operates on a freemium basis, partnering with funeral homes, hospices, and insurance providers, and is now rolling out an enterprise version for institutions like senior living facilities and life insurers. With digital estates becoming more complex and traditional death-care industries slow to evolve, Eazewell positions itself as a bridge between personal loss and technological efficiency.
Sources: Yahoo Finance, CT Insider
Key Takeaways
– Eazewell is deploying AI to streamline and unify fragmented end-of-life planning tasks that often burden grieving families.
– The startup leverages celebrity founders to bring visibility and trust into a space that is typically opaque and slow to adopt technology.
– Beyond consumer use, Eazewell is pushing into enterprise integrations with hospices, insurers, and senior living firms to scale adoption.
In-Depth
In an era when nearly every corner of our lives intersects with technology, it’s no surprise that even death care is now coming under the AI microscope. Eazewell is among the newest entrants in the “death tech” space — companies that use tech to assist with end-of-life planning, funeral arrangements, digital legacy, and related tasks. What sets Eazewell apart is its backing by household names, its ambition to serve both consumers and institutions, and the delicate balance it must strike between efficiency and empathy.
The origin of Eazewell is personal and poignant. Donnell Beverly Jr. — who lost both his parents within a few years — experienced firsthand how convoluted and emotionally draining funeral and estate chores can be. That friction point became his impetus to build a tool that does more than just “list funeral homes” — it orchestrates the logistical and administrative burden that often falls on surviving family members. Westbrook and Walker joined not only as co-founders but as magnifiers — their visibility helping the startup break through skepticism and inertia in an industry long shielded from tech disruption.
At its core, Eazewell operates a freemium AI agent — active around the clock — that assists with tasks like contacting funeral homes, pulling quotes, arranging services, canceling credit cards, closing or transferring accounts, and eventually managing digital assets and social media profiles of the deceased. Because Eazewell forms partnerships with service providers (e.g. funeral homes, hospices, insurance firms), many core features remain free for end users, with revenue generated from premium add-ons and institutional licensing. In 2025, the startup rolled out an enterprise version aimed at integrating its automation features into hospice software, senior living operations, and insurance platforms.
The timing seems favorable: the average person now maintains dozens of online accounts (70–100 by some estimates), meaning the administrative load after death isn’t just about physical estate but digital legacy. Families suddenly find themselves chasing utility bills, subscription services, digital storage, social media profiles, and more — each of which can incur financial or security risks if neglected. Eazewell is positioning itself as the central command for that transition, helping families minimize oversight, fraud, and oversight problems.
Yet challenges loom. Death care is a deeply emotional domain, and any misstep — e.g., seeming cold or impersonal — could provoke backlash. AI systems must be hyper-sensitive to nuance, recognizing the gravity of grief and privacy demands related to personal data. Legal and regulatory frameworks around digital estate, data privacy, and AI oversight are still emerging, meaning compliance burden may grow over time. Moreover, scaling across disparate funeral homes, regional regulations, and cultural norms will require careful adaptation.
Eazewell’s strategy to address these challenges lies partly in its B2B push. By embedding into institutions that already manage care transitions (hospices, insurers, senior living communities), Eazewell can piggyback on trusted systems and relationships, sidestepping much of the friction of convincing individual consumers. If it succeeds, it could become as inevitable and uncontroversial a service as life insurance — a backstage utility that families hope never to use but would deeply regret not having when needed.
Of course, that’s a high bar. The startup now must prove reliability, emotional intelligence, and legal robustness — all under public scrutiny, since influential names like Russell Westbrook are tied to its reputation. If Eazewell can navigate these waters wisely, it may reshape one of the last industries to be modernized.

