Good news in the form of a sudden windfall can force a family into a new financial position that materially alters their legacy and estate plan.
While newly acquired wealth may seem purely positive, it can attract the attention of the Internal Revenue Service and prompt an evaluation of which extended family members or charities should receive a share of what may now be a much larger estate.
A windfall requires thoughtful planning, especially when it arrives quickly and unexpectedly.
Immediate Steps: Tax and Liability Mitigation
Clients receiving sudden wealth could be at risk of making a series of high-stakes missteps. Advisors can help their clients maintain stability and avoid hasty financial decisions by implementing several initial planning protocols right away:
- Tax liability review. A windfall often triggers a significant income tax event in the current year. For clients with philanthropic goals, front-loading a donor-advised fund (DAF) or establishing a charitable lead annuity trust (CLAT) can provide an immediate income tax deduction in the year the windfall is received. Both strategies also remove contributed assets—and their future appreciation—from the taxable estate, serving a dual purpose that extends well beyond the current tax year.
- Asset protection audit. Increased wealth also brings increased visibility. To reduce exposure, new assets should rarely be held in an individual’s name. Evaluate the use of specialized trusts or limited liability companies (LLCs) to protect against future lawsuits or creditors.
- Titling and marital property. If the wealth is derived from an inheritance or a premarital business sale, strict titling is required to preserve its status as separate property. Commingling these funds into joint accounts can subject them to division in a future marital dispute.
- Review beneficiary designations. Existing wills and trusts often contain formula-driven provisions that were calibrated to a prior level of wealth. A sudden increase can cause those provisions to distribute assets in ways the client never intended. Reviewing beneficiary designations helps ensure that new assets do not bypass trust protections or create unintended estate tax consequences.
Next Steps: Transitioning from a Windfall to a Plan
Wealth that lasts is rarely accidental. A forward-looking estate plan turns a windfall into a lasting legacy rather than a missed opportunity.
- Introduce advanced transfer strategies. When an estate approaches or exceeds federal or state exemption limits, freezing the value of the windfall becomes a priority. Strategies such as grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs) or CLATs allow clients to transfer future appreciation to heirs or charitable beneficiaries with reduced gift tax exposure. A structured annual gifting strategy can further reduce the taxable estate over time.
- Explore stewardship options. Turning a sudden wealth event into a lasting legacy entails a shift from accumulation to purpose. A DAF provides a tax-efficient vehicle for charitable goals and serves as a training ground for heirs to practice financial stewardship. On a more personal level, drafting a family mission statement creates a rulebook for how this new wealth should—and should not—be used by future generations.
- Reevaluate fiduciaries. A jump-up in wealth and financial complexity may make a client’s original choice of executor or trustee less suitable. The individual previously named may lack the technical expertise to manage a high-value, multigenerational plan. Now is the time to review current appointments and consider professional fiduciaries or corporate trustees who can execute the plan with the necessary precision and neutrality.
Fortifying Their Future
An unexpected event, good or bad, can cause a financial hit unless the right next steps are taken. The advisor plays an irreplaceable role during times of sudden change in their clients’ lives.
Advisors can provide not only a sanity check for clients going through a transitional period but also a planning check that keeps them grounded and their plan up to speed.