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Over the course of my career, I’ve sat across the table from many women at pivotal moments in their lives.
Rarely do they come in because they suddenly decided it was time to focus on financial planning. More often, they are there because something changed.
The most common financial wake-up calls don’t arrive at a particular birthday or milestone. They happen at life’s inflection points, such as a divorce filing, the death of a spouse, a sudden separation or a serious health diagnosis.
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Even becoming a parent or approaching retirement can shift the ground beneath a family’s financial foundation.
In these moments, women who may have long trusted a partner to manage investments or oversee the details are suddenly responsible for decisions that feel high-stakes, technical and deeply personal.
In those first meetings, the emotion I encounter most often can be summed up in one word: Overwhelmed.
The three areas where women feel most unprepared
When women come to me after a major life transition, their concerns tend to center around three themes.
- Fear of running out of money. Even in affluent households, the question is immediate and visceral: “Will I be OK?” Without a clear understanding of assets, liabilities and long-term projections, uncertainty can feel paralyzing.
- Managing investments. A portfolio that once seemed abstract now feels intimidating. What used to be a quarterly statement signed and filed away has become a series of decisions about asset allocation, risk, liquidity and taxes, and those decisions are no longer someone else’s responsibility.
- Cash flow and budgeting. Understanding what it truly costs to maintain a household can be surprisingly difficult, especially if one spouse historically handled the numbers. In higher-net-worth families, lifestyle expenses, such as private school tuition, travel or charitable commitments, can obscure the true annual “burn rate.”
For older clients, there can also be a technological barrier. If you’ve never logged into an investment account or accessed documents online, even gathering information can feel daunting.
The assumption that ‘someone else is handling it’
In many marriages, particularly in traditional households or where one spouse is a business owner, one partner naturally takes the lead on investments and financial strategy. That division of labor can work — until it doesn’t.
I’ve worked with women who knew they were wealthy but didn’t understand how that wealth was structured.
- Statements went to a spouse’s office
- Tax returns were signed but not reviewed
- Meetings were attended by one partner
The illusion is that wealth equals security. In reality, understanding creates security.
I once advised a woman I’ll call Margaret who had been married for 25 years to the founder and CEO of a successful private company. On paper, their net worth was well into eight figures.
They owned multiple homes, a sizable brokerage account, interests in private equity funds, trusts for their children and a donor-advised fund (DAF). When the marriage unraveled, she discovered how complex that wealth really was.
A significant portion of their assets was illiquid, with a mix of private company equity, long lock-up funds and real estate partnerships.
Dividing assets wasn’t as simple as splitting a checking account. There were valuation disputes, executive compensation analysis, stock options, carried interest structures and deferred tax liabilities.
Two $5 million assets can look equal on paper. A brokerage account with a low-cost basis, a Roth account, a traditional IRA and an interest in a private fund have dramatically different tax implications and liquidity profiles.
For Margaret (and many other women in her situation), wealth did not eliminate fear. Instead, it made the decisions more complex.
Only after she retained her own independent advisory team did she gain clarity: A full asset inventory, cash flow projections, tax modeling and revised estate documents.
Most importantly, she built a strong relationship with her advisory team and felt confident asking questions and deepening her understanding of her finances.
She later told me, “I thought being wealthy meant being secure. I now know that understanding is what creates security.”
Who is most at risk?
In my experience, women are more likely to be financially uninvolved in households where they have stepped out of the workforce to raise children, and the husband manages finances. I also see it more often in families where spouses are 50 or older, reflecting more traditional role models.
That said, dual-income couples are not immune. Even when both partners work, one often defaults to managing investments and long-term planning.
Spouses of business owners are particularly vulnerable because so much wealth can be tied to complex compensation structures and private holdings.
Younger couples sometimes assume they “have plenty of time” to get organized. Unfortunately, life doesn’t always cooperate with that timeline.
Across these profiles, the pattern is consistent: Complexity increases risk when only one spouse understands it.
How to crisis-proof your finances
The goal is not to assume the worst. It is to build resilience.
If you want to crisis-proof your financial life, start here:
- Understand your balance sheet. Know your assets, liabilities, income, expenses and net worth. You don’t have to manage every detail, but you should understand the big picture.
- Build a six-month emergency fund. This provides immediate liquidity and flexibility if your circumstances change.
- Review your insurance coverage. Health, disability and life insurance are foundational protections.
- Contribute to retirement accounts. Whether through a 401(k) or IRA, maintain retirement savings in your own name.
- Have updated estate documents. A will, durable power of attorney and health care power of attorney are essential.
- Stay informed. If you leave the workforce to care for family, continue building financial knowledge. Circumstances can change.
These practical steps lay the groundwork. But resilience is not built on documents alone. It is built through shared understanding.
In addition to written records, I now encourage couples to consider something more personal: A short video overview.
The spouse who is more familiar with the family’s finances can record a simple video on their phone walking through the big picture:
- Where accounts are held
- How investments are structured
- What insurance policies are in place
- Who the trusted advisers are and how to reach them
It does not need to be technical or polished. In many cases, hearing a familiar voice calmly explain the landscape can be far easier to follow than a set of written instructions.
It may feel uncomfortable to think about needing it, but having that recording in place can bring tremendous peace of mind.
Most importantly, talk openly while you can. Ask your spouse:
- Where do we stand financially today?
- What is our long-term plan, and are we on track?
- If something happens to one of us, would the other know what to do and where to access information?
Finally, make sure you know how to access critical documents and accounts: Bank and brokerage information, retirement plans, insurance policies, estate documents, contact information for advisers, tax returns, loan documents, digital assets and the location of any safe deposit box or password manager.
Financial literacy is not about control. It is about confidence. Major life events will always bring emotion. But when both spouses understand the family’s financial structure, those moments don’t have to bring fear.

