After the Windfall: Your First 90 Days to Financial Security
September 25, 2025

Learn how to navigate the critical first 90 days after a financial windfall — safeguard your wealth, manage emotions, and build a foundation for long‑term impact.
Receiving a windfall—whether from the sale of a business, a legal settlement, or inheritance—can feel like crossing into a new financial world. You have choices to make. Decisions made now will often matter more than those made later. For business owners, multigenerational families, or clients after a liquidity event, the first 90 days are your opportunity to establish firm ground. Move too fast, and the risks multiply. Move with intention, and you lay the foundation for lasting security and purpose.
1. Pause, Breathe, Don’t Rush
- It may be tempting to make large purchases, invest in flashy ventures, or share the news widely. Resist. The emotional high of a windfall tends to drive impulsive decisions.
- Experts recommend setting aside one year’s living expenses in a safe, accessible account (checking, short‑term savings) before you commit the rest. During this buffer period, emotions stabilize, priorities get clearer.
2. Address Emotional and Social Dynamics
- Not all windfalls arrive joyfully. An inheritance might carry grief; a business sale might bring identity loss. Recognizing your feelings is not a luxury—it’s essential to preserving relationships and making clear decisions.
- Consider who you tell, when, and how. Early leaks can create tension with family or invite unfair expectations.
3. Secure the Essentials: Tax, Legal, Liquidity
- Find an unbiased tax professional (CPA or similar) who does not sell investment products. Early advice can prevent costly mistakes—especially for complex tax events like stock options, inherited retirement accounts, or annuities.
- Consider whether the windfall comes as a lump sum or annuity. The trade‑offs include tax consequences, inflation protection, your lifespan, and how easily the proceeds can be managed or protected.
4. Stabilize Before Strategizing
- With one year of living expenses secured, the rest of the funds should go into low‑risk, liquid or near‑liquid investments: FDIC‑insured accounts, Treasury bills, money‑market funds. The goal is safety and flexibility, not high returns.
- Take this period to record your highest priority financial goals—what matters most to you, your family, your legacy.
5. Build Your Advisory Team
- As soon as urgent issues are addressed, assemble a team: fee‑only financial planner (CFP or CFA preferably), estate attorney, trusted tax adviser.
- Make sure everyone understands your values, goals, risk tolerance—not just what the market or “the next big thing” says.
The first 90 days following a windfall are less about opportunity than stewardship. When managed thoughtfully, your windfall can empower life changes, lasting security for you and your heirs, and a legacy that aligns with your deepest values.
If you’re ready to move with intention—let us help you design a plan that protects your capital, clarifies your goals, and ensures your peace of mind. Contact Omni 360 Advisors today to schedule a strategy meeting, or book a legacy/estate plan review with Omni Legacy Law.
This blog was developed with the assistance of AI-based tools for research, drafting and editing support (Chat GPT), and reviewed by OMNI 360 personnel for accuracy and relevance.