Sudden wealth

You received money you did not have before. Now the next decisions matter.

An inheritance, legal settlement, lottery win, insurance payout, business sale, bonus, or other one-time amount can bring relief and pressure at the same time. We help organize what to review before rushed decisions take over.

First questions

The first job is not to look smart. It is to avoid moving too fast.

A one-time money event can come with deadlines, tax questions, legal documents, family requests, spending pressure, and investment pitches. The early planning goal is usually to protect flexibility while facts are organized.

Liquidity

"Where should the money sit while I decide?"

We help think through short-term cash, near-term obligations, and what should not be invested until the picture is clearer.

Taxes and legal

"What questions should I ask before using the money?"

Different sources can have different tax or legal considerations. We help identify questions to coordinate with qualified tax and legal professionals.

Pressure

"How do I handle everyone asking what I am going to do?"

We help build a phased plan so family, lifestyle, debt, gifts, and investing decisions do not all happen at once.

Money arrived before the plan?

Pause before the next decision.

A private conversation can help identify what should stay liquid, what needs tax or legal coordination, and what can wait.

Ask privately

Quick check

Find the first thing to organize.

Answer three questions and get a starting point. This is educational and does not provide individualized investment, tax, or legal advice.

How we help

First goal: protect flexibility.

You do not have to decide everything immediately. A careful process can separate urgent obligations from longer-term decisions and keep the money from becoming a source of confusion.

  • Identify immediate obligations, deadlines, and cash needs.
  • Separate short-term liquidity from long-term capital.
  • Coordinate CPA or attorney questions where appropriate.
  • Create a phased investment policy once the facts are clearer.
Planning after a major life and money event
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