Topic Guide
What Is Estate planning?
Estate planning is a subject covered in depth across 7 podcast episodes in our database. Below you'll find key concepts, expert insights, and the top episodes to listen to — all distilled from hours of conversation by leading experts.
Key Concepts in Estate planning
Baby steps
Dave Ramsey's 7-step plan for financial freedom, guiding individuals from building an emergency fund to paying off debt, investing, and becoming generous. Callers explicitly mention being on Baby Step 2 (debt payoff) and Baby Step 3 (fully funded emergency fund), highlighting its structured approach to financial progress.
The middle class trap
A concept describing individuals, often high-income and with substantial net worth (e.g., $750,000), who feel financially constrained or 'stuck' due to their wealth being primarily tied up in illiquid assets like home equity and retirement accounts. This episode presents it as a common problem for BiggerPockets Money listeners seeking early financial independence and optionality.
Liquidity first optionality framework (leaf)
A proposed framework by Scott Trench to address the Middle Class Trap, focusing on intentionally building liquid after-tax assets. The goal is to gain optionality and flexibility earlier in life by strategically reallocating savings, even if it appears to be a deviation from traditional tax-optimized advice.
Optionality fund
The term used for the after-tax brokerage account built by strategically deprioritizing 401k contributions for a period. This fund aims to provide peace, freedom, and flexibility, enabling choices like taking a riskier job, a lower-paying job with better work-life balance, or pursuing entrepreneurship without severe financial disruption.
Fork 2 strategy
One of three options presented for escaping the Middle Class Trap, which involves reducing or stopping excess 401k contributions (beyond the employer match) for 1-3 years. Instead, those funds are directed to a taxable brokerage account to build after-tax liquidity, aiming for earlier optionality and potentially better long-term tax optimization.
Financial wholeness
Coined by Tiffany Aliche, financial wholeness is a state achieved when 10 core financial components—budgeting, savings, debt, credit, earning, investing for retirement, investing for wealth, insurance, financial team, net worth, and estate planning—work together for your greatest good. Unlike financial independence, it doesn't require a pile of money but rather mastery of these components at your current life stage, ensuring financial safety and the ability to pay bills.
What Experts Say About Estate planning
- 1.The "Middle Class Trap" describes high-income, high-net-worth individuals who feel stuck because their wealth is illiquid, primarily concentrated in home equity and retirement accounts.
- 2.Traditional advice to blindly maximize 401k contributions, while tax-efficient in the short term, can lead to a "liquidity crunch" and delay optionality earlier in life.
- 3.Deprioritizing 401k contributions for 1-3 years (beyond the employer match) to build after-tax liquidity can be a more tax-optimal strategy over a lifetime than solely focusing on pre-tax deferrals, especially for early retirees.
- 4.After-tax brokerage accounts can provide tax-free withdrawals of capital gains and qualified dividends when in lower early-retirement tax brackets (e.g., 0% for those in the 12% ordinary income bracket).
- 5.Over-optimizing solely for pre-tax accounts can lead to higher tax burdens in traditional retirement due to Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs).
- 6.Having a diversified mix of wealth in pre-tax, Roth, and after-tax accounts provides critical flexibility to adapt to future changes in tax law, healthcare subsidies, and personal goals.