8 Planning Strategies to Protect and Grow Wealth

When your net worth grows, so do the complexities... More money, More Problems (as they say).

The strategies that worked when you were building wealth often fall short once you’ve accumulated it. Taxes take a bigger bite, risk exposure widens, and the stakes around estate and business decisions rise.

If you’re in the high-net-worth category, you don’t just need financial advice—you need coordinated tax, investment, and estate planning.

Missing even one opportunity can cost millions over time. The following eight points highlight where high-net-worth individuals need to pay attention right now.


1. Taxes Are Your Biggest Expense

  • The higher your income, the more exposed you are to federal and state tax brackets.

  • Focus on strategies like Roth conversions, tax-loss harvesting, and income shifting.

  • Plan ahead for the 2025 TCJA sunset, which may raise tax rates.

Related: How the “Big Beautiful Bill” Reshapes Your Tax Plan

2. Asset Location Matters as Much as Allocation

  • Diversification alone isn’t enough.

  • Place tax-inefficient assets (bonds, REITs) in tax-deferred accounts.

  • Keep growth-oriented stocks or ETFs in taxable accounts for long-term capital gains treatment.

Related: Guide to the 3 Tax Funnels: Where Should Your Next Investment Go?

3. Estate Taxes May Apply to You

  • The current federal estate tax exemption is historically high, but could shrink again.

  • Without planning, your estate could face a 40% tax bill.

  • Tools like irrevocable trusts, gifting strategies, and charitable planning reduce exposure.

4. Liquidity Is Key for Flexibility

  • Wealth on paper doesn’t mean cash in hand.

  • Keep a portion of assets liquid for opportunities, emergencies, and tax bills.

  • Review lending options (like a securities-backed line of credit) as part of your liquidity strategy.

5. Insurance Is Asset Protection

  • Liability lawsuits and long-term care costs threaten wealth.

  • Umbrella liability insurance and proper business structures are essential.

  • Evaluate life insurance for estate planning, not just income replacement.

6. Business Owners Face a Double Layer of Planning

  • Your business may be your biggest asset—and biggest risk.

  • Create a succession or exit plan well before you want out.

  • Use retirement plans, deferred compensation, or ESOPs to reduce taxes and attract talent.

7. Concentrated Stock Positions Create Risk

  • Many high-net-worth investors hold too much in company stock.

  • Use hedging strategies, charitable remainder trusts, or systematic selling to reduce risk.

  • Rebalance into a portfolio aligned with your long-term goals.

Related: Concentrated Stock Positions: How to Handle Them

8. Philanthropy Can Be Tax-Efficient

  • Donor-advised funds and charitable trusts let you support causes you care about while lowering taxes.

  • Bunch charitable deductions into high-income years to maximize the benefit.

  • Give appreciated securities instead of cash to avoid capital gains.

Related: Donor Advised Funds: A Unique Way to Give (and Save on Taxes)


Bottom Line

Wealth at this level brings opportunities and risks that require a coordinated plan. Taxes, estate law, and investment strategy aren’t separate conversations—they’re interconnected. The difference between doing “okay” planning and intentional planning is measured in millions.

If you haven’t stress-tested your financial plan against upcoming tax law changes, liquidity needs, and estate considerations, now’s the time. A proactive review today sets you up to keep more of what you’ve built and transfer it on your terms.


Visit my site -> finnprice.com

Education on a Weekly Basis -> Newsletter

Subscribe to the Youtube Channel for more video content -> Finn Price Youtube

About the author: Finn Price, CPFA, CEPA, is a business owner and wealth manager at Railroad Investment Group. He helps successful entrepreneurs & individuals with concentrated stock positions in their 30s, 40s and 50s build, organize, protect and transfer their wealth.

Note: this article is general guidance and education, not advice. Consult your money person or your attorney for financial, tax, and legal advice specific to your situation.

Securities and advisory services offered through LPL Financial, a registered investment Advisor, Member FINRA/SIPC.

Next
Next

Concentrated Stock Positions: How to Handle Them