Twins Ellen and Arthur were both married, each with two children, living what would generally be described as solid middle-class lives.
They had steady incomes, mortgaged homes, and retirement savings that had not grown as quickly as planned. Like many households at this stage of life, they were doing fine but felt behind.
When an elderly aunt with no spouse or children died, they became the only living relatives. The estate was valued at $1 million. After estate administration costs and final expenses, each sibling received roughly $500,000.
What followed became a clear test of how windfalls actually work in real life.
Ellen’s Adventure
Ellen wanted certainty. The inheritance felt like a rare chance to remove a major source of stress.
Her first move was to pay off her mortgage, writing a check for $280,000. Friends and family praised the decision. Being debt-free felt responsible and reassuring.
From a financial standpoint, the trade-off was immediate. Ellen converted a large pool of liquid cash into home equity. That equity may appreciate over time, but it is not easily accessed without selling the home or borrowing against it, a distinction the Federal Reserve regularly highlights in its analysis of household balance sheets.
Her mortgage rate was about 3.2%, which was low by historical standards. Around the time of the inheritance, yields on savings accounts, CDs, and short-term government securities were often higher than that rate, according to data from the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
Paying off the loan locked in a return equal to the interest avoided, while giving up flexibility and potential income elsewhere.
With the mortgage gone, Ellen’s monthly cash flow improved. That improvement felt like progress.
Over time, her savings discipline slipped. She reduced her contributions to retirement accounts and used part of the remaining inheritance for home renovations that improved comfort but did not generate income or liquidity.
She also became more generous with discretionary spending, including family gifts and a costly cruise she likely would never have taken before the inheritance.
Gradually, the inheritance dwindled, and Ellen ran low on easily accessible cash. On paper, her net worth looked healthy. In practice, a growing share of it was tied up in her home.
Arthur’s Story
Arthur was more thoughtful and cautious.
He kept his mortgage and focused first on eliminating high-interest debt. Credit cards and personal loans with rates well above his mortgage were paid off quickly, providing a clear and immediate financial benefit, a strategy commonly supported by financial experts.
He also kept a meaningful cash reserve. Research from the Federal Reserve has repeatedly shown that households with liquid savings are better able to absorb unexpected expenses without taking on new debt.
Rather than treating the inheritance as spending money, Arthur treated it as support for a longer-term plan.
Arthur increased contributions to his workplace retirement plan, including catch-up contributions available to workers over 50. According to the Internal Revenue Service, these provisions are designed specifically to help late-career workers close retirement gaps.
His take-home pay fell, but he used part of the inheritance to cover ongoing expenses. He also gave himself a generous, but not excessive, discretionary fund to support experiences he may not otherwise have had.
The effect was straightforward. More of his income moved into tax-advantaged retirement accounts, while the inheritance quietly supported the transition.
He also kept a portion of the money in relatively liquid accounts for emergencies. Yields varied over time, but access and stability mattered more than chasing returns.
Three years after the windfall
Ellen succeeded in what she set out to do. She eliminated debt and gained peace of mind. The trade-off was flexibility.
When a major home repair came up, she did not have cash readily available. Paying for it required selling investments at an unfavorable time or taking on new borrowing she thought she had left behind. Her balance sheet looked strong, but her choices were narrow.
Arthur made the opposite trade. He still has a mortgage, but he also has liquid cash, higher retirement contributions, and the ability to absorb an expensive surprise without disrupting the rest of his finances. His lifestyle did not change, but his confidence in his retirement plans did.
This is not a story about frugality versus recklessness. It is a story about sequencing. Ellen used the inheritance to make an early, irreversible decision. Arthur delayed irreversible moves and focused on planning, investing, and cautious spending.
They started from the same place, but followed very different trajectories. Which would you choose?
If you inherit $100,000 or more, get some advice from a pro before blowing it. SmartAsset offers a free service that matches you to a vetted, fiduciary advisor in less than 5 minutes. And if you do not already have a will, maybe now is the time to start protecting your family. Make a will today.
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